What is Talent—and How Important Is It? What Lies Behind Great Achievement? What Stops People From Pursuing Their Dreams? How To Boost Achievement (and Fulfillment) Through Mindset
Dr Carol Dweck introduces the idea of
the two kinds of mindsets: the fixed mindset (one in which we believe our
intelligence to be predetermined and failure is a personal weakness) and the
growth mindset (in which we believe our intelligence grows as we learn new
things and failure as a learning opportunity). She tells us how best to embrace
the positives of the growth mindset and the pitfalls of being stuck in the
fixed mindset. Along the way we hear of famous sportspeople, CEOs of companies,
students, teachers, parents and coaches who are fall within these mindsets, and
what these people achieved (or sacrificed) through how they viewed their own failures.
Many of the case studies used by
Carol Dweck were surprising; “Yes, [Thomas] Edison was a genius. But he was not
always one. His biographer, Paul Israel, sifting through all the available information,
thinks he was more or less a regular boy of his time and place. … What
eventually set him apart was his mindset and drive.” Finding that Dweck’s
theory noted that success was born out of effort and not natural talent suddenly
flipped my own view of the world on its head.
We’ve all be taught that trying hard
will yield better results in the long run, but we’ve also been taught that
talent is what makes us able to do things in the first place. Dweck explains
that believing our own ‘natural ability’ is part of the fixed mindset – that we
have a limit on what we can and can’t achieve. That if we fail, we become a
failure. Nobody wants to be a failure, and so some of us will avoid challenging
situations on purpose to avoid the chance of getting something wrong. Conversely, others will
embrace the challenges as learning opportunities. These are the ones with the
growth mindset – the want and need to improve and learn.
As an aspiring teacher and mother-of-three, I had a specific interest in the effects of the growth versus fixed mindsets on children. The evidence suggesting that children develop a much more immersive interest in education and learning when exposed to a growth mindset is monumental; one example she uses in her book is of a school which took on difficult students who had been removed from mainstream school and labelled as unteachable. In this new school, the teacher (who is in the growth mindset) embraced the challenges of each individual learner, took them on, and turned their education, and entire lives, around. Through use of positive reinforcement, differentiating their needs and understanding what motivated them on an individual basis, the teacher of the school changed the course of those childrens’ lives forever.
Dweck’s theory opened up my own mind
to different ways of thinking; It made me question the kind of praise I’ve been
giving to my children; the feedback I’d been giving to my peers; the ways in which
I’d approached problems and faced failures. I found myself constantly
reassessing the way I viewed the things I’d been taught in my more vulnerable
years. I realised I'd been living in a fixed mindset, thinking that my achievements and failures defined me. In fact, I was so hung up with my lack of achievement that I started to feel like I would fail in everything; that I was a terrible person, an unfit mother incapable of setting a good example for my children.
With Dweck telling us how to stop being in the fixed mindset and how to turn our lives around for the better, ceasing opportunities to grow instead of shirking away from challenges, I was able to see my role as a parent for what it really is; that of a teacher. I want my children to be as happy as they possibly can, not to feel pressured to do what I want of them. They're free to make their own decisions, but I am a guide in the process of their life. Dweck has shown me that having a mind open to improvement, I can lead my children down the right path.
With Dweck telling us how to stop being in the fixed mindset and how to turn our lives around for the better, ceasing opportunities to grow instead of shirking away from challenges, I was able to see my role as a parent for what it really is; that of a teacher. I want my children to be as happy as they possibly can, not to feel pressured to do what I want of them. They're free to make their own decisions, but I am a guide in the process of their life. Dweck has shown me that having a mind open to improvement, I can lead my children down the right path.
Read more about Carol Dweck and her book Mindset by clicking here.
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