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Collection 1: "The Secret to Raising Smart Kids" by Carol S. Dweck

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  1. implicit
    being without doubt or reserve
    The result plays out in children like Jonathan, who coast through the early grades under the dangerous notion that no-effort academic achievement defines them as smart or gifted. Such children hold an implicit belief that intelligence is innate and fixed, making striving to learn seem far less important than being (or looking) smart.
  2. innate
    inborn or existing naturally
    The result plays out in children like Jonathan, who coast through the early grades under the dangerous notion that no-effort academic achievement defines them as smart or gifted. Such children hold an implicit belief that intelligence is innate and fixed, making striving to learn seem far less important than being (or looking) smart.
  3. engender
    call forth
    These experiments were an early indication that a focus on effort can help resolve helplessness and engender success.
  4. ruminate
    reflect deeply on a subject
    Subsequent studies revealed that the most persistent students do not ruminate about their own failure much at all but instead think of mistakes as problems to be solved.
  5. denigrate
    cause to seem lesser or inferior
    Some students reacted defensively to mistakes, denigrating their skills with comments such as “I never did have a good rememory,” and their problem-solving strategies deteriorated.
  6. cohort
    a group of people having approximately the same age
    The other, also confronting the hard problems, looked up at the experimenter and approvingly declared, “I was hoping this would be informative!” Predictably, the students with this attitude outperformed their cohorts in these studies.
  7. malleable
    easily influenced
    The mastery-oriented children, on the other hand, think intelligence is malleable and can be developed through education and hard work.
  8. stringent
    demanding strict attention to rules and procedures
    Psychologists Lisa Blackwell, then at Columbia University, and Kali H. Trzesniewski, then at Stanford University, and I monitored 373 students for two years during the transition to junior high school, when the work gets more difficult and the grading more stringent, to determine how their mind-sets might affect their math grades.
  9. stagnant
    not growing or changing; without force or vitality
    The students with a stagnant view of intelligence were presumably unwilling to admit to their deficit and thus passed up the opportunity to correct it.
  10. deficit
    a failure in neurological or mental functioning
    The students with a stagnant view of intelligence were presumably unwilling to admit to their deficit and thus passed up the opportunity to correct it.
  11. competence
    the quality of being adequately or well qualified
    Presumably, managers with a growth mind-set see themselves as works-in-progress and understand that they need feedback to improve, whereas bosses with a fixed mind-set are more likely to see criticism as reflecting their underlying level of competence.
  12. broach
    bring up a topic for discussion
    Those with a fixed mind-set are less likely than those with a growth mind-set to broach problems in their relationships and to try to solve them, according to a 2006 study I conducted with psychologist Lara Kammrath, now at Wake Forest University.
  13. laud
    praise, glorify, or honor
    Most of those lauded for their hard work wanted the difficult problem set from which they would learn.
  14. module
    a self-contained component used in combination with others
    We have now encapsulated such instruction in an interactive computer program called Brainology. Its five modules teach students about the brain—what it does and how to make it work better.
  15. endeavor
    earnest and conscientious activity intended to do something
    Similarly, hard work and discipline contribute more to school achievement than IQ does. Such lessons apply to almost every human endeavor.
Created on Tue Jul 07 14:33:31 EDT 2020 (updated Mon Jul 13 13:05:59 EDT 2020)

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