Abstract

BackgroundThe extent to which students view their intelligence as improvable (i.e., their “mindset”) influences students’ thoughts, behaviors, and ultimately their academic success. Thus, understanding the development of students’ mindsets is of great interest to education scholars working to understand and promote student success. Recent evidence suggests that students’ mindsets continue to develop and change during their first year of college. We built on this work by characterizing how mindsets change and identifying the factors that may be influencing this change among upper-level STEM students. We surveyed 875 students in an organic chemistry course at four points throughout the semester and interviewed a subset of students about their mindsets and academic experiences.ResultsLatent growth modeling revealed that students tended to shift towards viewing intelligence as a stable trait (i.e., shifted towards a stronger fixed mindset and a weaker growth mindset). This trend was particularly strong for students who persistently struggled in the course. From qualitative analysis of students’ written survey responses and interview transcripts, we determined that students attribute their beliefs about intelligence to five factors: academic experiences, observing peers, deducing logically, taking societal cues, and formal learning.ConclusionsExtensive prior research has focused on the influence of mindset on academic performance. Our results corroborate this relationship and further suggest that academic performance influences students’ mindsets. Thus, our results imply that mindset and academic performance constitute a positive feedback loop. Additionally, we identified factors that influence undergraduates’ mindset beliefs, which could be leveraged by researchers and practitioners to design more persuasive and effective mindset interventions to promote student success.

Highlights

  • Students’ academic success is influenced by their cognitive abilities and content knowledge, and by non-cognitive factors, such as their beliefs, attitudes, and values

  • To determine whether undergraduate students’ mindsets changed over the semester, we compared the fit of the intercept-only model to the slope model

  • We found that students tended to shift slightly towards a fixed mindset and away from a growth mindset and that the trajectory of their mindset change was related to their experiences with academic struggle

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Summary

Introduction

Students’ academic success is influenced by their cognitive abilities and content knowledge, and by non-cognitive factors, such as their beliefs, attitudes, and values. One influential non-cognitive factor is students’ beliefs about the degree to which intelligence is a stable trait, termed “mindset” (Dweck, 1999). Students who believe that intelligence is a stable, unchangeable trait are Limeri et al International Journal of STEM Education (2020) 7:35 achieving greater academic success (Dweck, 1999; Smiley et al, 2016). Given the far-reaching influence of mindsets, it is important to understand how and why students’ mindsets develop and change over time. The extent to which students view their intelligence as improvable (i.e., their “mindset”) influences students’ thoughts, behaviors, and their academic success. We surveyed 875 students in an organic chemistry course at four points throughout the semester and interviewed a subset of students about their mindsets and academic experiences

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