Showing posts with label Growth Mindset. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Growth Mindset. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Week 13, Growth Mindset

So one of the challenges is to choose a meme and write a blog about it.  I chose this meme.


I really liked this meme, not necessarily because of the picture, but I liked what was said in the blog with the picture.

"In our minds, the first bit of information we take in does hold special sway. The Anchoring cognitive bias is our tendency to rely heavily on our first impressions (or ‘anchor’ information) when making a decision. Once the anchor has been set, other judgments are made by adjusting away from that anchor without taking into consideration other viewpoints."

This really hit me because with my major I have learned a lot about the Middle East, specifically Islam and Judaism.  I think one of the worst things is to have to sit in public spaces and listen to people talk about either of those subjects when they are completely ignorant of how either of these religions work. A lot of people in the United States have a big problem with Islam because the only thing that most americans know about the religion is that extremist from the religion flew a plane into the twin towers and killed hundreds of people.  Now there is Paris added into the mix and it just gets worse.  My whole Facebook feed is full of people saying "no" to Syrian refugees simply because of their religious affiliation.  However I think that I once felt the same, before I came to college and started learning.  I was once that ignorant person, that awful person who spoke about things that she had no idea about.  I think the real difficulty is forgetting what you've already learned to learn the correct information.  

Friday, August 28, 2015

Growth Mindset -- I don't know a whole lot about it....yet.

Honestly I've never hear of this before, however I have experienced this with several of my professors here at OU.  I find the idea that we should be rewarded for continuing to try and improve a nice prospect. Though I see myself as a person who has a growth mindset now, I do realize that not long ago I had a very fixed mindset.  In fact it took a hard fall in my grades to make me realize that doing what I had done all throughout high school was no longer going to work when it came to college.  Suddenly I had to work so much harder to do as well as I use to do, and honestly, I love the challenge.  Even in my hobbies I enjoy the challenge; I started Judo my sophomore year of college and since then I've come to realize that every match or "roll" I lose teaches me something, a new move, a flaw in my own moves, or the humbling fact that I'm never as good as I think I am.  I find the idea of the "growth mindset" to be an interesting topic that is worth talking about and researching, however I question how effective it actually is with younger students who can't or won't grasp the idea of what having a "growth mindset" means.  The effort part of the whole idea seems to be the hardest part to instill into young students these days who are always looking for the shortcut, the easy way out.  I'd like to continue to research the statistics on this a fair bit more in order to see how effective it is on a wide range of different types of students.