Growth Mindset
The attitudes and beliefs that you and your students bring into the classroom influence academic performance. Growth mindset, or the belief that intelligence can be developed, plays a particularly important role in academic success and feelings of belonging (Murray et al. 2022). Students who believe that the efforts they put into their learning will improve their performance are more likely to persist through challenging topics, take more academic risks, and have higher performance (Smiley et al. 2016). Conversely, students with fixed mindsets believe that their intelligence is a stable trait, and are more likely to give up after experiencing setbacks. Further, instructor mindset can influence the attitudes that young students shape about their own intelligence (Melsor, Corbin, and Martin, 2019) and shape the academic performance and experience of college students (Canning et al. 2019). These patterns suggest that what we do as educators to foster a growth mindset in students, and ourselves, is an important component of higher education.