Interesting little article about how believing that intelligence is malleable actually improved peoples’ grades. Cites research by Aronson and colleagues. Of course, an improvement in grades doesn’t mean improvement in intelligence (things like motivation and self esteem probably play a big role here), so the title is a bit misleading. Still, interesting stuff, with some practical implications and ethical issues to think about.
Believing You Can Get Smarter Makes You Smarter
November 14, 2006 by Phronk
Posted in intelligence | No Comments Yet
Leave a Reply
About:
I'm Mike Battista, a psychology student at UWO currently working on my Ph.D.I needed a good way to organize articles, quotes, clips, and web sites that I find which are related to my research, and be able to access them from any computer. Since it's hard to organize my articles into simple categories, I thought it would be best to organize stuff with tags. Since blogs can organize posts with tags, can be accessed anywhere, and can handle all sorts of different content, it's the perfect place to put all my stuff. This probably won't be of interest to anybody but me, but feel free to browse.
My research interests include: all things personality, intelligence, creativity, intuition, cognitive psychology, parapsychology, and I'm just starting to get into the psychology of technology, the media, and pop culture.
Note: This is meant for personal use. If I'm breaking any copyright laws, it is untinentional, and I will take down any offending material immediately when notified.
Categories
-
Recent Posts
- Why Automatic Stereotyping Happens
- Believing You Can Get Smarter Makes You Smarter
- Mysterious ‘Neural Noise’ Actually Primes Brain for Peak Performance
- Books Mentioning the Mere Exposure Effect
- The Future is Now – Dean Radin
- Trends in Cognitive Ability (Flynn Effect) – Teasdale & Owen
- Self-Percieved Intuitiveness – Rogers & Wiseman
-
Recent Comments
Desktopjunk on Why Automatic Stereotyping… phronk on Trends in Cognitive Ability (F… Catana on Trends in Cognitive Ability (F… Archives
-
Blog Stats
- 399 hits