Hello, 1st grade families!
Due to the short week, we will be having a special edition of our weekly update. This week's topic? MINDSET!
(To find dates and upcoming events, please refer to our last weekly update.)
Due to the short week, we will be having a special edition of our weekly update. This week's topic? MINDSET!
(To find dates and upcoming events, please refer to our last weekly update.)
Carol Dweck has been a pioneer in some amazing research and, as of April 2016, she and psychological scientist Kyla Haimovitz published another very important study on how parents' views on failure can predict a fixed or growth mindset in children.
The study, "What Predicts Children's Fixed and Growth Intelligence Mind-Sets? Not Their Parents View of Intelligence but Their Parents Views of Failure," was published in the journal Psychological Science. The study concludes that a child's view of his/her own intelligence is shaped by how parents view a child's struggles and setbacks. As Haimovitz states, "Our findings show that parents can endorse a growth mindset but they might not pass it on to their children unless they have a positive and constructive reaction to their children's struggles."
For example, parents who typically show concern when a child comes home with a poor test score may convey to the child that intelligence is mostly fixed. However, parents who focus on learning from the poor score convey the message that intelligence can be built through hard work and improvement.
What is interesting to me is that a child's mindset is not found to be affected by a parent's (or teacher's, for that matter) belief on intelligence, but rather their view on failures. For me, it reaffirms the importance of celebrating mistakes as opportunities for learning in our classroom!
You can read more about this study here.
In closing, here is another great video by Carol Dweck on the power of the word YET. This is a TED talk from 2014 that is still very, very relevant today. Take a look!
How do you address mistakes and failures with your children? Does this reaffirm some of your current practices, or cause you to rethink how you view failure? Comment below...I'd love to hear what you think!
And now....Some PHOTOS!
Enjoy!
And now....Some PHOTOS!
Enjoy!
:-) Mrs. B
Sources:
Association for Psychological Science. "Seeing the benefits of failure shapes kids' beliefs about intelligence." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 28 April 2016. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/04/160428132136.htm>.
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