[LIT] praising students

Bill IVEY bivey at sbschool.org
Wed Oct 31 09:14:33 EDT 2007


Hi

In the current issue of "Educational Leadership," Carol Dweck has an
article entitled "The Perils of Praise." In it, with numerous references
to current research, she describes two different mind-sets held by people,
a "fixed mind-set" in which you have the intelligence you were born with
and that's just how it is, and a "growth mind-set" in which your effort
and perseverance are paramount. Students with a fixed mind-set show much
lower motivation than students with a growth mind-set, and indeed may even
be fearful of trying (thinking "if I don't do well, that must mean I'm
stupid."). So obviously, we would want to foster a growth mind-set.

The role of praise, then, must be at least in part to reinforce that
mentality. Saying "Wow, you're smart." may produce a short term positive
effect, but in the long run produces a fixed mind-set mentality and thus
decreases motivation. On the other hand, praising the process ("praise for
engagement, perseverance, strategies, improvement, and the like") produces
a growth mind-set, and has more positive long-term effects.

How do you use praise in your classrooms, and what effects are you seeing?

Take care,
Bill Ivey
Stoneleigh-Burnham School




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