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Audrey Hunter

Brainology

Updated: Mar 1, 2019


This week's article: https://via.hypothes.is/https://www.nais.org/magazine/independent-school/winter-2008/brainology/


The beginning of the article really struck me because it is definitely what I have seen in my experience with education. I have frequently seen the idea of “fixed intelligence” being projected by faculty especially in regards to achieving higher education and subsequently being adopted by students. For me, I was always praised for being smart so much that I had to teach myself how to study in high school and college. When I was younger, things like reading and writing came very easily to me and therefore I never learned how to work at something that was hard for me. It got to the point where I would give up caring if an assignment was too hard, but also if it was too easy. I only had a few teachers who saw past that and found out what would be the best way to push me into being the best student I could be in my own way. For that reason I think that praising children for things that they are born with is not optimal, as the article says it is much more beneficial to praise for effort, hard work and perseverance. In a similar way, I think it can also be detrimental for colleges to only go for students with perfect GPAs. While it obviously is difficult to maintain perfect grades throughout high school, it is a detriment to the school to ignore students who may have initially had bad grades but who significantly improved, or to dismiss students who may have done slightly less well than others but who truly put in the effort to get a B in a class. In the real world, we need more people who have failed but persevered, who know how to problem solve, who know how to think outside of the box, and a lot of those people do not have perfect grades. Furthermore, I have seen how this fixed mindset is really harmful to people who have learning disabilities or cognitive delays, as well as those who are just not smart in an academic way. A lot of times these students are already at a disadvantage, so praising for only academic achievement can give them a very low self esteem. They are often labeled at a young age as dumb or lazy and those labels more often than not have a lasting impact on how they see themselves. A growth mindset is far more beneficial for having people grow up to be confident, resilient and productive members of society. It also allows for more qualified people to be recognized. A lot of people are successful but not necessarily good at what they do, and in contrast to that, there are a lot of people who have potential but no confidence to do what they are meant to do. In conclusion, I think that in this day and age that children are not being praised too much, but rather for the wrong thing and that is what is causing problems.

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