Strategies to Develop a Growth Mindset
Our school has had a strong focus on mindset for a while. We
praise effort over achievement and champion the idea that those students who
work hard will ultimately be more successful. Ana Castillo loaned me Carol
Dweck’s Mindset book when I started at school, and I immediately identified the
biggest barrier to learning in my classroom was students having a fixed mindset
in Maths. I then started reading Jo Boaler’s work and based my CPD project on
what I read, trying to develop a growth mindset in my classroom.
Here are 5 things I did:
1.
Focused on Effort
This is something school does well anyway,
but when marking books I only ever made comments about effort rather than work
(other than suggestions for improvements obviously). I would also shower the
students showing excellent or improved effort with rewards, merits, postcards
and phone calls home. I had a star of the fortnight too, where I would take
picture of someone’s classwork who had put excellent effort into a lesson so
other students could see what excellent effort looks like.
2.
Championed Mistakes
Mistakes in Maths are inevitable and
probably what students are most frightened of. I created a culture that
mistakes are brilliant if we learn from them. I would make mistakes myself to
show it was human, I would give wrong answers and get students to analyse what
was wrong and what the corrections should be, I would pick out students work
who had made a mistake and show it under the visualiser to discuss with the
class (then thank them for letting us all learn by sharing their work and give
them a merit). I even started a display of “Our Favourite Mistakes
Learning Opportunities”. A starter task I would use was “favourite no” where
the students anonymously attempted a question, I’d sort them into “correct” and
“wrong” piles, then look at some of the wrong answers under the visualiser
comment on what was good but then highlight where students went wrong. This was
great to see what students knew too.
3.
Taught them about Growth Mindset
I told them about how effort was
fundamental to making progress. I discussed students I had taught previously
who had been successful because of their effort (obviously not mentioning
names). I did assemblies with examples of successful people, including staff,
who had overcome difficulties to become successful at something. I used a lot
of the information from Carol Dweck and Jo Boaler’s books to give reasoning
behind some of the things we were doing. Unsurprisingly, if you explain the
benefits students are more likely to get on board (although this was something
I wasn’t very good at doing beforehand).
4.
Changed my Language
Again, linking back to #1 being careful to
praise effort over attainment, so praising a student for working hard or
improving rather than praising the one who always gets full marks without
really trying. Moving away from talking about work being hard or easy, not
labelling students or grouping them by ability. It was important to speak
positively and challenge students showing a fixed mindset, when students said
“I can’t do it” or “I don’t get it” remind them that effort is vital to be
successful, I then would always say “ask me a question” and leave them to
think. Then they would sit and carfefully think what the problem was and ask a
specific question to move their understanding forward, having a ‘lightbulb
moment’.
5.
Students Chose Mindset Posters
I selected a couple of different mindset
posters and showed them all to the students, asked them which their favourites
were, printed them and stuck on the wall to refer to them in lessons. As they
chose them, it was powerful when a student said they couldn’t do something to
point at the poster.
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