Abstract Chinese students are more likely than US students to hold a malleable view of success in school, yet are more likely to hold fixed mindsets about intelligence. We demonstrate that this apparently contradictory pattern of cross-cultural differences holds true across multiple samples and is related to how students conceptualize intelligence and its relationship with academic achievement. Study 1 (N > 15,000) confirmed that US students endorsed more growth mindsets than Chinese students. Importantly, US students’ mathematics grades were positively related to growth mindsets with a medium-to-large effect, but for Chinese students, this association was slightly negative. Study 2 conceptually replicated Study 1 findings with US and Chine...
The emphasis on effort in Asian culture frequently has been used to explain the superior academic pe...
We propose that differences in the education practices prevalent in China and America are an importa...
Mindset is an established set of attitudes held by someone to identify with their own personal intel...
Inspired by previous research indicating implicit beliefs about the malleability of human qualities,...
An increasing amount of research has indicated that the effectiveness of growth mindset (GM) interve...
Existing research on theories of intelligence shows that students with growth mindsets tend to outpe...
Growth mindset literature suggests that an emphasis the ability to improve yields positive learning ...
This article reviews theory and research on cross-national (Asian vs. American) differences in acade...
In order to examine the relationship between cognitive and motivational variables and their relation...
Cultural differences in learning-related dispositions are investigated amongst 7,300 first year stud...
It has been suggested that students ' belief of whether intelligence is malleable and flexible ...
Past studies have suggested associations between children’s mindset and Achievement Orientation, yet...
Copyright © 2002 Taylor & Francis LtdFlynn (1991) proposed that students from Asian cultural backgro...
Cultural differences in learning-related dispositions are investigated amongst 7,300 first year stud...
The purpose of this research was to provide cross-cultural evidence of the relationship between stud...
The emphasis on effort in Asian culture frequently has been used to explain the superior academic pe...
We propose that differences in the education practices prevalent in China and America are an importa...
Mindset is an established set of attitudes held by someone to identify with their own personal intel...
Inspired by previous research indicating implicit beliefs about the malleability of human qualities,...
An increasing amount of research has indicated that the effectiveness of growth mindset (GM) interve...
Existing research on theories of intelligence shows that students with growth mindsets tend to outpe...
Growth mindset literature suggests that an emphasis the ability to improve yields positive learning ...
This article reviews theory and research on cross-national (Asian vs. American) differences in acade...
In order to examine the relationship between cognitive and motivational variables and their relation...
Cultural differences in learning-related dispositions are investigated amongst 7,300 first year stud...
It has been suggested that students ' belief of whether intelligence is malleable and flexible ...
Past studies have suggested associations between children’s mindset and Achievement Orientation, yet...
Copyright © 2002 Taylor & Francis LtdFlynn (1991) proposed that students from Asian cultural backgro...
Cultural differences in learning-related dispositions are investigated amongst 7,300 first year stud...
The purpose of this research was to provide cross-cultural evidence of the relationship between stud...
The emphasis on effort in Asian culture frequently has been used to explain the superior academic pe...
We propose that differences in the education practices prevalent in China and America are an importa...
Mindset is an established set of attitudes held by someone to identify with their own personal intel...