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Quotes About Mindset

the fixed-mindset premise that great geniuses do not need great teams. They just need little helpers to carry out their brilliant ideas.
~ Carol S. Dweck
Benjamin Barber, an eminent sociologist, once said, "I don't divide the world into the weak and the strong, or the successes and the failures.… I divide the world into the learners and nonlearners." What
~ Carol S. Dweck
Think of times other people outdid you and you just assumed that they were smarter or more talented. Now consider the idea that they just used better strategies, taught themselves more, practiced harder, and worked their way through obstacles. You can do that too, if you want to.
~ Carol S. Dweck
There was a saying in the 1960s that went: "Becoming is better than being." The fixed mindset does not allow people the luxury of becoming. They have to already be.
~ Carol S. Dweck
There were two meanings to ability, not one: a fixed ability that needs to be proven, and a changeable ability that can be developed through learning
~ Carol S. Dweck
What are the consequences of thinking that your intelligence or personality is something you can develop, as opposed to something that is a fixed, deep-seated trait?
~ Carol S. Dweck
When people believe their basic qualities can be developed, failures may still hurt, but failures don't define them. And if abilities can be expanded—if change and growth are possible—then there are still many paths to success.
~ Carol S. Dweck
This growth mindset is based on the belief that your basic qualities are things you can cultivate through your efforts. Although people may differ in every which way—in their initial talents and aptitudes, interests, or temperaments—everyone can change and grow through application and experience.
~ Carol S. Dweck
People with the growth mindset know that it takes time for potential to flower.
~ Carol S. Dweck
growth mindset: a zest for teaching and learning, an openness to giving and receiving feedback, and an ability to confront and surmount obstacles.
~ Carol S. Dweck
We also know that there is a mindset that helps people cope well with setbacks, points them to good strategies, and leads them to act in their best interest.
~ Carol S. Dweck
Howard Gardner, in his book Extraordinary Minds, concluded that exceptional individuals have "a special talent for identifying their own strengths and weaknesses.
~ Carol S. Dweck
It's the parents who respond to their children's setbacks with interest and treat them as opportunities for learning who are transmitting a growth mindset to their children.
~ Carol S. Dweck
It's the parents who respond to their children's setbacks with interest and treat them as opportunities for learning who are transmitting a growth mindset to their children. These parents think setbacks are good things that should be embraced, and that setbacks should be used as a platform for learning. They address the setback head-on and talk to their children about the next steps for learning.
~ Carol S. Dweck
Math and science need to be made more hospitable places for women. And women need all the growth mindset they can get to take their rightful places in these fields.
~ Carol S. Dweck
fixed mindset makes you concerned with how you'll be judged; the growth mindset makes you concerned with improving.
~ Carol S. Dweck
People with the growth mindset, however, believe something very different. For them, even geniuses have to work hard for their achievements. And what's so heroic, they would say, about having a gift? They may appreciate endowment, but they admire effort, for no matter what your ability is, effort is what ignites that ability and turns it into accomplishment.
~ Carol S. Dweck
In fact, in the fixed mindset, adolescence is one big test. Am I smart or dumb? Am I good-looking or ugly? Am I cool or nerdy? Am I a winner or a loser? And in the fixed mindset, a loser is forever.
~ Carol S. Dweck
They know how to take tests and get A's but they don't know how to do this—yet. They forget the yet.
~ Carol S. Dweck
In one world, failure is about having a setback. Getting a bad grade. Losing a tournament. Getting fired. Getting rejected. It means you're not smart or talented. In the other world, failure is about not growing. Not reaching for the things you value. It means you're not fulfilling your potential.
~ Carol S. Dweck
when they see it—it's the ability to dig down and find the strength even
~ Carol S. Dweck
a fixed ability that needs to be proven, and a changeable ability that can be developed through learning.
~ Carol S. Dweck
However, this point is crucial: The growth mindset does allow people to love what they're doing -- and to continue to love it in the face of difficulties.
~ Carol S. Dweck
when you teach children to measure themselves from their success, they then measure themselves from their failure as well. Finally,
~ Carol S. Dweck