作者
David S. Yeager,Paul Hanselman,Gregory M. Walton,Jared S. Murray,Robert Crosnoe,Chandra Muller,Elizabeth Tipton,Barbara Schneider,Chris S. Hulleman,Cintia Hinojosa,David Paunesku,Carissa Romero,Kate Flint,Alice M. Roberts,Jill Trott,Ronaldo Iachan,Jenny Buontempo,Sophia Yang Hooper,Carlos M. Carvalho,P. Richard Hahn,Maithreyi Gopalan,Pratik Mhatre,Ronald F. Ferguson,Angela Duckworth,Carol S. Dweck
摘要
A global priority for the behavioural sciences is to develop cost-effective, scalable interventions that could improve the academic outcomes of adolescents at a population level, but no such interventions have so far been evaluated in a population-generalizable sample. Here we show that a short (less than one hour), online growth mindset intervention—which teaches that intellectual abilities can be developed—improved grades among lower-achieving students and increased overall enrolment to advanced mathematics courses in a nationally representative sample of students in secondary education in the United States. Notably, the study identified school contexts that sustained the effects of the growth mindset intervention: the intervention changed grades when peer norms aligned with the messages of the intervention. Confidence in the conclusions of this study comes from independent data collection and processing, pre-registration of analyses, and corroboration of results by a blinded Bayesian analysis. A US national experiment showed that a short, online, self-administered growth mindset intervention can increase adolescents’ grades and advanced course-taking, and identified the types of school that were poised to benefit the most.