The power of believing that you can improve | Carol Dweck | TED

6,190,126 views ・ 2014-12-17

TED


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00:13
The power of yet.
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I heard about a high school in Chicago
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where students had to pass a certain number of courses to graduate,
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and if they didn't pass a course, they got the grade "Not Yet."
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And I thought that was fantastic,
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because if you get a failing grade, you think, I'm nothing, I'm nowhere.
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But if you get the grade "Not Yet",
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you understand that you're on a learning curve.
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It gives you a path into the future.
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"Not Yet" also gave me insight
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into a critical event early in my career,
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a real turning point.
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I wanted to see
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how children coped with challenge and difficulty,
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so I gave 10-year-olds
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problems that were slightly too hard for them.
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Some of them reacted in a shockingly positive way.
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They said things like, "I love a challenge,"
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or, "You know, I was hoping this would be informative."
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They understood that their abilities could be developed.
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They had what I call a growth mindset.
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But other students felt it was tragic, catastrophic.
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From their more fixed mindset perspective,
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their intelligence had been up for judgment,
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and they failed.
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Instead of luxuriating in the power of yet,
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they were gripped in the tyranny of now.
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So what do they do next?
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I'll tell you what they do next.
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In one study, they told us they would probably cheat the next time
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instead of studying more if they failed a test.
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In another study, after a failure,
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they looked for someone who did worse than they did
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so they could feel really good about themselves.
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And in study after study, they have run from difficulty.
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Scientists measured the electrical activity from the brain
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as students confronted an error.
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On the left, you see the fixed-mindset students.
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There's hardly any activity.
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They run from the error.
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They don't engage with it.
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But on the right, you have the students with the growth mindset,
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the idea that abilities can be developed.
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They engage deeply.
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Their brain is on fire with yet.
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They engage deeply.
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They process the error.
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They learn from it and they correct it.
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How are we raising our children?
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Are we raising them for now instead of yet?
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Are we raising kids who are obsessed with getting As?
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Are we raising kids who don't know how to dream big dreams?
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Their biggest goal is getting the next A, or the next test score?
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And are they carrying this need for constant validation with them
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into their future lives?
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Maybe, because employers are coming to me and saying,
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"We have already raised a generation
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of young workers who can't get through the day
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without an award."
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So what can we do?
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How can we build that bridge to yet?
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Here are some things we can do.
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First of all, we can praise wisely,
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not praising intelligence or talent.
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That has failed.
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Don't do that anymore.
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But praising the process that kids engage in,
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their effort, their strategies, their focus, their perseverance,
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their improvement.
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This process praise creates kids who are hardy and resilient.
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There are other ways to reward yet.
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We recently teamed up with game scientists
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from the University of Washington
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to create a new online math game that rewarded yet.
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In this game, students were rewarded for effort, strategy and progress.
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The usual math game
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rewards you for getting answers right, right now,
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but this game rewarded process.
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And we got more effort,
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more strategies,
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more engagement over longer periods of time,
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and more perseverance when they hit really, really hard problems.
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Just the words "yet" or "not yet," we're finding,
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give kids greater confidence,
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give them a path into the future that creates greater persistence.
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And we can actually change students' mindsets.
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In one study, we taught them
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that every time they push out of their comfort zone
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to learn something new and difficult,
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the neurons in their brain can form new, stronger connections,
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and over time, they can get smarter.
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Look what happened: In this study,
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students who were not taught this growth mindset
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continued to show declining grades over this difficult school transition,
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but those who were taught this lesson showed a sharp rebound in their grades.
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We have shown this now, this kind of improvement,
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with thousands and thousands of kids, especially struggling students.
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So let's talk about equality.
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In our country, there are groups of students
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who chronically underperform,
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for example, children in inner cities,
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or children on Native American reservations.
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And they've done so poorly for so long
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that many people think it's inevitable.
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But when educators create growth mindset classrooms
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steeped in yet,
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equality happens.
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And here are just a few examples.
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In one year, a kindergarten class in Harlem, New York
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scored in the 95th percentile
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on the national achievement test.
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Many of those kids could not hold a pencil
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when they arrived at school.
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In one year,
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fourth-grade students in the South Bronx, way behind,
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became the number one fourth-grade class in the state of New York
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on the state math test.
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In a year, to a year and a half,
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Native American students in a school on a reservation
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went from the bottom of their district to the top,
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and that district included affluent sections of Seattle.
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So the Native kids outdid the Microsoft kids.
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This happened because the meaning of effort and difficulty were transformed.
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Before, effort and difficulty
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made them feel dumb, made them feel like giving up,
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but now, effort and difficulty,
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that's when their neurons are making new connections,
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stronger connections.
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That's when they're getting smarter.
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I received a letter recently from a 13-year-old boy.
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He said, "Dear Professor Dweck,
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I appreciate that your writing is based on solid scientific research,
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and that's why I decided to put it into practice.
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I put more effort into my schoolwork,
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into my relationship with my family,
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and into my relationship with kids at school,
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and I experienced great improvement in all of those areas.
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I now realize I've wasted most of my life."
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Let's not waste any more lives,
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because once we know
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that abilities are capable of such growth,
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it becomes a basic human right for children, all children,
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to live in places that create that growth,
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to live in places filled with "yet".
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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