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"It's ok - not everyone can be good at math:" Instructors with an entity theory comfort (and demotivate) students

Journal

Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

Subject

Organisational Behaviour

Authors / Editors

Rattan A;Good C;Dweck C S

Biographies

Publication Year

2012

Abstract

Can comforting struggling students demotivate them and potentially decrease the pool of students pursuing math-related subjects? In Studies 1–3, instructors holding an entity (fixed) theory of math intelligence more readily judged students to have low ability than those holding an incremental (malleable) theory. Studies 2–3 further revealed that those holding an entity (versus incremental) theory were more likely to both comfort students for low math ability and use “kind” strategies unlikely to promote engagement with the field (e.g., assigning less homework). Next, we explored what this comfort-oriented feedback communicated to students, compared with strategy-oriented and control feedback (Study 4). Students responding to comfort-oriented feedback not only perceived the instructor's entity theory and low expectations, but also reported lowered motivation and lower expectations for their own performance. This research has implications for understanding how pedagogical practices can lock students into low achievement and deplete the math pipeline.

Keywords

Implicit theory; Intelligence; Teaching; Pedagogical practice

Available on ECCH

No


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