Global Mindset Initiative Introduction: Envisioning the Future of Growth Mindset Research in Education

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carol Dweck ◽  
David Yeager
TEM Journal ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1838-1848
Author(s):  
Sudjai Jirojkul ◽  
Siwarit Pongsakornrungsilp ◽  
Nontipak Pianroj ◽  
Prachyakorn Chaiyakot ◽  
Narawadee Buakhwan ◽  
...  

The aim of the research is to assess the mindset, activities and the participation of communitybased tourism enterprises in the tourists’ awareness and behavior. Tourism has the significant impact in order to develop the guideline for organizing the activities and managing the community-based tourism in reflecting the responsible environment and energy linking character and behavior of tourists. We found a strong growth mindset of entrepreneur’s community as the key factor that affected on driving the participation of tourism management. Mindset was a significant mechanism to motivate and encourage sustainable tourism in the future. Finally, it represents the responsible environment and energy systematically.


Author(s):  
Gary Shank

In this paper, I would like to show how qualitative research in education and semiotics can be brought together for the benefit of each field. Starting with attempts to define both qualitative research and semiotics in ways that can inform both disciplines, I hope to accomplish this task by mapping a series of three crossroads that define the past, present, and hopefully the future of the field.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kali Trzesniewski ◽  
David Yeager ◽  
Diego Catalán Molina ◽  
Susana Claro ◽  
Catherine Oberle ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 157-164
Author(s):  
Crystal L. Hoyt ◽  
Jeni L. Burnette

Growth mindsets are increasingly used to promote learning, development, and health. The increased popularity resulted in scrutiny and disputes about utility. The current work reviews a perspective critical to the debate. Namely, we focus on emerging research that examines both the favorable and potentially adverse consequences of growth mindset messaging in stigma-relevant contexts. This double-edged sword model merges the mindset perspective with attribution theory and the psychological essentialism literature. In stigmatizing contexts and in isolation, growth mindsets can indirectly predict less positive outcomes, via personal responsibility for the problem, but more positive outcomes, via expectations for the potential to manage conditions in the future. Programmatic research illustrates how to tailor growth mindset messages and interventions, to avoid the potential costs of blame, yet keep the benefits of self-efficacy and weakened essentialism.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary Murphy ◽  
Stephanie Fryberg ◽  
Laura Brady ◽  
Elizabeth Canning ◽  
Cameron Hecht

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