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CUNY Learning Mindset Modules Group

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1.6 Cultivate a Growth Mindset in Yourself First (Required to earn certificate)

  • 💬  Reflection/Discussion:

    • How can you authentically model a growth mindset through your attitude, behaviors, and teaching practices? How can you support and inspire other faculty and staff to cultivate a growth mindset and related behaviors in their academic department and college?
Viewing 4 replies - 16 through 19 (of 19 total)
  • Consider showing struggling, for real, with students. Put up a problem not based on the knowledge of the subject, but on other skills that might be challenging for all, such as logic or a Suduko. Let the students see they can figure some things out even before the teacher gets it. Then, have students discuss why this activity was useful. What did they learn that they can apply to the class and to other challenges?

    Seth,

    For me, it has been both through bringing it up in formal settings (when it connects in meetings) and informally. I find that when faculty complains about students, it is a good entry point. Start by empathizing and then sharing one strategy that helps you. Maybe then follow up with an email that has a resource. Encourage that professor and follow up. If you feel comfortable, they tell them about the mindset modules and share your experience to encourage them to join.

    Some folks are going to be curmudgeons, but they will be like that no matter what. Look for those frustrated, but open to suggestions.

    Deborah

    There are many ways in which I can model a growth mindset in the college community. I share with students stories from my own education (like on Day 1 of college, I registered for Philosophy thinking it was Psychology—and how I dealt with that). It was a true semester of growth on many levels. In the classroom, I think I can do more encouraging of students through meaningful feedback that points them to the next step or level and challenge them to think more–rather than trying to communicate with grades. I try to do this now. I also try to give them time to reflect on and share their learning and their journey in learning. I also try to give students opportunities to give me feedback, both openly in the classroom and more anonymously through online forms. Talking about how things are going is the norm, or at least a goal. I want to know what’s going on for them and what specific ways I might orient the course more to what they need to or want to learn. By teaching FYE-enhanced classes (a current BMCC initiative) students are also directly encouraged to develop growth mindset practices (such as setting SMART goals). Likewise, through the BMCC Teaching Collaboratory, I worked to emphasize nonjudgmental peer observation of teaching so that instructors focus more on student learning and meeting their objectives and less on “how it went.”

    This past semester I taught a writing intensive class (or writing across the curriculum) for the first time. I decided to make it “ungraded” and had students set their own goals for what they wanted to accomplish related to writing during the semester. This was helpful because they were all starting at different levels of writing skill, English fluency, etc., and also had different education and career plans, and so a one size fits all approach definitely would not have worked. I think this fostered a growth mindset by acknowledging that whatever skill level they were at in terms of writing was fine, and that we would work through the semester to advance those skills without judgment or competition. Also, by taking the focus off the grade, students were able to focus on their growth! It was a little messy at the end of the semester with self-assessment and final grades, but, I know that I will learn from my “failures” and do better next semester.

     

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