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DNA Is NOT Your Destiny. Dr. Carol Fletcher Associate Director TRC, UT Austin. Presented at the Equity and Social Justice Conference August 10, 2012 Pflugerville ISD. Session Objectives. Overview fixed and growth mindsets Explore how mindset influences student effort and achievement
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DNA Is NOT YourDestiny • Dr. Carol Fletcher • Associate Director • TRC, UT Austin Presented at the Equity and Social Justice Conference August 10, 2012 Pflugerville ISD
Session Objectives • Overview fixed and growth mindsets • Explore how mindset influences student effort and achievement • Practice strategies for making students aware of their mindset and moving them closer to a growth perspective
Elbow partner - What message would your students glean from this video? How do your students view failure? • Brief group share • Aim To Grow Your Brain by Joanne Billingsley • Listen and see if you have had a “Teddy” in class before
For these students, effort and ability are inversely proportional. In their minds, if a task is difficult and requires considerable effort, students assume than they lack some innate (genetic) ability.
Have you taught a student like “Teddy” or “Derek” before? • What if these students knew... • Your DNA is NOT your Destiny • Smart is something you GET, not something you are. • What would be the impact on your class environment, student success, and achievement? What behaviors would you see in class? • Group share
Mindset • I don’t divide the world into the weak and the strong, or the successful and the failures...I divide the world into the learners and the non-learners. ~ Benjamin Barber, sociologist
Billingsley’s 5 Steps to Inspiring Effort & Practice • Analyze core beliefs about intelligence • Present basic lessons in neuroscience • Review and summarize current, credible research in neuroplasticity • Evaluate current research on the effects of television, sleep, fear, and stress on the brain’s structure and function • Teach “brain friendly” strategies
Carol Dweck, Ph.D. • Leading researcher in developmental psychology • Documented that mindset has a powerful influence on a student’s willingness to put forth effort, and performance in school\ • Categorized growth vs. fixed mindsets
Growth Mindset • Individuals who are perceived as “learners.” • Believes that basic qualities (intelligence, character, personality) are things we can cultivate, change and grow through effort and practice. • Look at difficult challenges as an opportunity to get smarter and learn something new
Growth Mindset • Interested in getting better • Failure is thought of as a temporary setback or opportunity to grow and learn • Mistakes are just learning opportunities for the brain
Fixed Mindset • Individuals are perceived as “non-learners” • Believes that basic qualities are set in stone and are mostly unchangeable. • Believes intelligence, character, athletic ability are predetermined by genetics
Fixed Mindset • Individuals are overly concerned about hiding deficiencies, believing they are permanent • Feel the need to prove that they are smart • Will not take risks and avoid challenging situations for fear of failure
John McEnroe • Won 7 Grand Slam titles, 3 at Wimbledon & 4 at US Open • Won 9 Grand Slam men’s doubles titles • Posted best single season win-loss record in 1984 at 96.47% • 1999 inducted into International Tennis Hall of Fame • One of the greatest tennis players in 20th century
Steve Lipofsky Basketballphoto.com Michael Jordan • 5 MVP awards • 10 All-NBA First Team & 9 All-Defensive First Team • 14 All-Star game appearances • NBA record highest regular season scoring 30.12 ppg • 2009 NBA Hall of Fame • 1999 - Named greatest North American athlete of 20th century by ESPN
Comparison Study • Find an elbow partner • Person A - reads Lesson 2.3 • Person B - reads Lesson 2.4
John McEnroe • Person A provides a summary to person B • Be ready to share your answers to the following questions... • What clues reflected the “fixed mindset” • Share classroom behaviors of a student who has a “fixed mindset.”
Michael Jordan • Person B provides a summary to person A • Be ready to share your answers to the following questions... • What clues reflected the “growth mindset” • Share classroom behaviors of a student who has a “growth mindset.”
Group Share • Personal experiences with a “fixed mindset” student • Personal experiences with a “growth mindset” student • Personal Reflection...what type of mindset do you have? • Powerful Message for students...
Mindset Questionnaire • Please complete the questionnaire
Powerful Messagefor Students! • Step #2 & #3: Neuroscience and Neuroplasticity • You can CHANGE your BRAIN! • London Cab Drivers vs. Bus Drivers • Stroke victims
Dr. Merzenich’s MonkeysPay Attention • Both Groups had on headphones with music and device that tapped their fingers. • Group A: taught to pay attention to finger tapping sensation. • Group B: taught to pay attention to headphone sounds
Dr. Merzenich’s MonkeysPay Attention • Group A: when finger tapping rhythm changed monkeys rewarded with sip of juice • Group B: when sound of headphones changed monkeys rewarded with sip of juice
The Results • After 6 weeks the brains were compared • Group A: dramatic increase in brain region that responds to sensory input • Group B: expansion of the brain’s region that handles sound
What can this teach students? • Both attention and repetitive practice are needed to “change your brain!” • Recall how you learned to text message on your phone, drive a car, ride a bike...
#4 How does experience change brain structure and function? • Lack of sleep impacts brain functioning - REM needed to consolidate newly learned information • “I need to sleep on it” • Sleep survey • TV and video games alter brain structure
Fixed Mindset = fear • Recall what we discussed about students who are afraid to take risks, try new things, push themselves to failure • What behaviors do you see in students who fear exposing themselves to failure?
Combating Fear • How do we help our students to combat their fears so they don’t interfere with learning? • What is the biology of fear?
Brain Biology - Fear isn’t all just in your head Hypothalamus Amygdala Adrenal Glands Blocks functioning of prefrontal cortex and prioritizes response to threat Adrenaline
Fears students feel at school • With your elbow partner, list 5 fears you think your students experience • Complete this task with students and have them share
Common Student Fears • I might fail, even if I try • I will look stupid if I ask a question • I am not “smart enough” I will be bullied because I’m not cool • I will disappoint my parents • I will be asked to read aloud in class • I will have to do a math problem in front of the class
How can teachers combat this fear of rejection/fixed mindset? • Examine your own mindset • Praise effort, not ability • Consistently emphasize that high standards can be achieved with hard work • Your brain can grow and change with practice like any other muscle • Failure is an opportunity to learn
Now What? • Let everyone R.I.S.E.
R.I.S.E • Reframe Evaluative Activities • Class exercise instead of verbal ability • Problem solving instead of math test • Chemistry check instead of chemistry test • Check for understanding instead of test
What Does this Mean for YOU? • Reframe Evaluative Activities • Elbow partner - share what you could do in your classroom to achieve this • Group Share - state your grade level and/or content area
R.I.S.E • Identity Inoculation • Multiple Identities Activity • Elbow Share • Group Share • Diverse Portfolio Awareness
R.I.S.E • Shaping Student’s Mindset • Teach and discuss the two mindsets • Reinforce the ability to change attitudes from fixed to growth
R.I.S.E • Educate students on Mindset, Stereotype threat and neuroplasticity • Examine your classroom culture/messaging • Attribute test anxiety to stereotype threat not ability • Focused attention and repetition is key • Mistakes are learning opportunities for the brain