The Mind Lab: Research #1


Taking a very brief break, from my holiday in the Coromandel, to share an insight into my literature review, a.k.a RESEARCH #1 that I have completed as part of my learning at The Mind Lab.



I’d love to hear your feedback in the comments below on how I could turn this literature review topic into my teacher inquiry topic for RESEARCH #2


I framed my literature review around the question; 

What impact does a growth mindset have on learners from low socio economic families?


The most interesting pieces of research that I discovered was a study by Claro, Dweck, and Paunesku (2016) that attributed holding a growth mindset to accelerated learning for low socio economic learners. An entire year level of Chilean public schools answered mindset questions as a part of their standardised national testing regime. The outcomes of this research showed that the lowest income students were twice as likely to hold a fixed mindset and that is fixed mindset is a strong predictor to success (in school) for low socio economic learners. The research does not suggest that structural factors like income inequality and disparities in school quality were less important than the psychological factor of a learners mindset. This piece of research showed what I had believed to be truth, that learners from low socioeconomic families are less likely to hold a growth mindset about their learning than learners from wealthier families. The results of the study suggested that a growth mindset can overcome economic disadvantage.


So what did I discover? 


The conclusion that I came of from my research were that, low socioeconomic status leaves a mark on the biological and neurological foundations of a person. But the window of a brains plasticity, or change is wide. A growth mindset intervention has the potential to complement other education or social initiatives. A growth mindset intervention alone will not change the educational outcomes of learners from low socioeconomic when. But a growth mindset intervention has the potential to work alongside other educational and social initiatives. 


I am wary that a growth mindset intervention is about fixing the child, and not the system. I am yet to discover how growth mindset thinking aligns with the Kapapa Maori principle of ‘taonga tuku iho’, that sees Maori achieving in school and in life, as Maori. 


On the other hand, growth mindset initiatives are an innovative way to add value and make a positive difference for our learners, without reinventing the the education system or our schools, which takes time and huge financial resources. A growth mindset intervention is possible within decile one schools, as it can be implemented with modest resources. 


I am pondering how this link between growth mindset and achievement could be explore further with my year 1/2 decile one learners… 


Any thoughts would be much appreciated.

Kia Kaha!! 


Claro, S. , Paunesku, D. , & Dweck, C. (2016). Growth Mindset temper the effects of poverty on academic achievement. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 113 (31), 8664 - 8668

2 comments:

  1. Hi Rebecca,

    This is really interesting research - I'd be keen to read your full literature review at some point, if that's possible.

    'Growth Mindset' is a really interesting area of education and the connection to low socioeconomic status links quite strongly to one of my favourite readings regarding self-efficacy by Pajares (Self-Efficacy During Childhood and Adolescence - Implications for Teachers and Parents):
    https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/bb2f/53f4ba6dd197ce64673f880869286eb4ebed.pdf

    It discusses how our views and perceptions of our ability impacts our self-confidence and self-belief. Low self-efficacy results in a 'Fixed Mindset' whereas strong self-efficacy can lead to a 'Growth Mindset'.

    It might be interesting for you to involve the parents of your learners as part of your survey(s) and investigate if they have 'Fixed' or 'Growth Mindsets' regarding education and their experiences of school. Could the parental views of education and their own self-efficacy as learners impact their children's perspectives, too?

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    1. I attempted to make this link in my literature review. But couldn't find the right research or the right words to say it. So thank-you for sharing that article it help me to join together a few more pieces of the puzzle. I am aiming to incorporate growth mindset teaching into the new class I am opening this term!

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