In the informative article, “The Effort Effect”, by Marina Krakovsky, a Stanford psychologist named Carol Dweck was asked to examine a British soccer team. This was because the performance director Tony Faulkner felt as if they …show more content…
She realised that the key isn’t ability; it’s whether you look at ability as genetic or something that could potentially be developed. She decided to begin an experiment on children, by giving them math problems. Through exercises, the experimenters trained half of the group to think that their mistakes were due to a lack of effort. These children learned to keep going when failure occurs until they succeed. However, the group that didn’t get this training, continued to fall apart in the face of failure. This proves that having a growth mindset is substantial to growing.
A lot of people, especially teenagers, have this idea that everyone is born with the talent they have. However, in the article “Changing Our Mindset”, Carol Dweck goes more in depth about how obtaining a growth mindset is extremely beneficial to everyone. We can either have a fixed mindset where we let failure or success define us, or we can have a growth mindset where we don’t let setbacks get in our way. Having a growth mindset means that you don’t let anything define you, but rather accept failure with open arms and use it as an opportunity to do