The Effort Effect - why failure isn't an obstacle for some

[click image for larger chart]
Stanford Alumni Magazine
...Such zest for challenge helped explain why other capable students thought they lacked ability just because they’d hit a setback. Common sense suggests that ability inspires self-confidence. And it does for a while—so long as the going is easy. But setbacks change everything. Dweck realized—and, with colleague Elaine Elliott soon demonstrated—that the difference lay in the kids’ goals. “The mastery-oriented children are really hell-bent on learning something,” Dweck says, and “learning goals” inspire a different chain of thoughts and behaviors than “performance goals.”
Students for whom performance is paramount want to look smart even if it means not learning a thing in the process. For them, each task is a challenge to their self-image, and each setback becomes a personal threat. So they pursue only activities at which they’re sure to shine—and avoid the sorts of experiences necessary to grow and flourish in any endeavor. Students with learning goals, on the other hand, take necessary risks and don’t worry about failure because each mistake becomes a chance to learn. Dweck’s insight launched a new field of educational psychology—achievement goal theory.
Dweck’s next question: what makes students focus on different goals in the first place? During a sabbatical at Harvard, she was discussing this with doctoral student Mary Bandura (daughter of legendary Stanford psychologist Albert Bandura), and the answer hit them: if some students want to show off their ability, while others want to increase their ability, “ability” means different things to the two groups. “If you want to demonstrate something over and over, it feels like something static that lives inside of you—whereas if you want to increase your ability, it feels dynamic and malleable,” Dweck explains. People with performance goals, she reasoned, think intelligence is fixed from birth. People with learning goals have a growth mind-set about intelligence, believing it can be developed. (Among themselves, psychologists call the growth mind-set an “incremental theory,” and use the term “entity theory” for the fixed mind-set.) The model was nearly complete (see diagram)....

2 Comments:
Very nice, Fouro. I've read something about this before, although exactly where and when escapes me. Certainly seems to explain a lot about a lot.
When I first read about this I realized that I fall squarely in the fixed mindset camp, and I began taking steps to counteract it, but it's pernicious and ingrained. Recent progress has come from an unexpected source; World of Warcraft.
My 11-year-old son is quite smitten with the online game, and I recently joined him in play as a way to connect, out of curiosity, and just for the fun of it. Knowing how the game works now, I can't imagine a more effective way to move someone from the fixed mindset to the growth mindset. The game is a powerful lesson in persistence through failure leading to eventual success and achievement.
Were I a social psychologist, I think I would design an experiment around this game or one like it, to see if it does in fact move people from the fixed mindset to the growth mindset. Research on exactly what does accomplish such a change would certainly get a thorough reading from me.
Thanks again for your excellent post.
Thanks for stopping by, sharpbean. I like your idea on WoW although I've never played. Speaking of which, not usre if you know of Kathy Sierra, but an interesting idea on the threshold between reward/persistence and learning curves in software (or any system) can be found here: http://tinyurl.com/9d7ye
On the topic of fixed or growth, I've been struggling to get a book out that touches in part on the same thing. I find that ideology and culture really hold huge sway until *emotional* events cause the breaking down of walls. Reality only gets a chance when fantasy fails spectacularly, a la Wall Street's current come-uppance. A meager crack at the barrier here from 2004: http://tinyurl.com/lpsc8
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