XQ Knowledge Module No. 3 The Science
of Adolescent Learning
10
JO BOALER
Author and Professor of
Mathematics Education,
Stanford Graduate School
of Education
+ The beliefs students hold about themselves can
change everything, even the way their brains work.
+ One of most important things anyone can do for
mathematics learning is to believe in themselves.
+ No
one is born with a math brain, and anyone can
achieve at high levels through hard work.
+ If students can hold on to the belief that they can
do well, and keep that belief even when people are
giving
them the opposite message, then they can
achieve anything.
Developing a
growth mindset.
The way we think about learning has a huge impact on how we
acquire and retain knowledge. A student’s mindset, according to
Carol S. Dweck, a psychologist at Stanford
University and author
of
The New Psychology of Success, is critical to the capacity to
develop strong learning identity. She defines mindset as a self-
theory, or a perception students hold about themselves.
Students
with a fixed mindset believe basic qualities like intelligence and
talent can’t be changed—so they spend their time documenting
rather than developing their own capabilities.
Students with a growth mindset understand that intelligence
and talents can be developed through
perseverance and hard
work. Thus, they are active, risk-taking learners committed to
overcoming obstacles and striving for accomplishment.
“When you enter a mindset, you enter a new world. In one
world (the world of fixed traits), success is about proving you’re
smart or talented. Validating yourself. In the other (the
world
of changing qualities), it’s about stretching yourself to learn
something new. Developing yourself,” says Dweck.
What if a teacher said,
“You
must have worked
very hard,” instead
of, “You’re so smart”?
How might the way we
validate effort affect
how
students approach
their work?
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