Focus
- Adaptation & Foresight, Identity & Belonging, Metrics & Incentives
Category
- Philosophy
Lens
- Behavioural
Explanation
What it is
The growth mindset, developed by psychologist Carol Dweck, is a belief system that frames intelligence, talent, and ability as malleable rather than fixed traits.
It posits that capability can be cultivated through effort, strategy, feedback, and persistence.
This stands in contrast to a fixed mindset, which assumes that ability is static and failure is evidence of inherent limitation.
When to use it
- When designing learning environments or performance reviews that aim to foster continuous improvement.
- When individuals or teams are facing setbacks, self-doubt, or fear of failure.
- When cultural narratives around “talent” or “genius” are undermining collective motivation or effort.
Why it matters
- Adopting a growth mindset changes the psychological relationship with failure.
- It builds resilience, openness to feedback, and intrinsic motivation.
- In education, leadership, and organisational culture, it cultivates environments that reward learning and adaptability rather than perfection.
- Over time, this mindset reshapes both identity and systemic expectations — reframing potential as a journey, not a ceiling.
Reference
Definitions
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Growth Mindset
The belief that intelligence and abilities can be developed through effort, strategy, and feedback rather than being fixed traits.
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Fixed Mindset
The belief that intelligence and abilities are innate and unchangeable, leading individuals to avoid challenges that might expose limitations.
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Neuroplasticity
The brain’s ability to form and reorganize neural connections, providing a biological foundation for learning and improvement.
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Metacognition
Awareness and regulation of one’s own thought processes — a key enabler of self-improvement and reflection in a growth mindset.
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Praise Orientation
The motivational outcome of how feedback is framed — process praise (“You worked hard”) reinforces growth; person praise (“You’re smart”) reinforces fixed beliefs.
Canonical sources
- Carol S. Dweck, Mindset: The New Psychology of Success, 2006
- Eduardo Briceño, TED Talk: The Power of Believing You Can Improve, 2016
- Jo Boaler, Mathematical Mindsets, 2015
- Mary C. Murphy & Carol S. Dweck, Mindsets Shape Consumer Behavior, Journal of Consumer Psychology, 2016
- David Yeager & Carol Dweck, Mindsets That Promote Resilience: When Students Believe That Personal Characteristics Can Be Developed, Educational Psychologist, 2012
Notes & caveats
- Growth mindset is often misapplied when reduced to motivational slogans (“just try harder”) without structural support for learning.
- Dweck cautions that false growth mindset arises when effort is praised indiscriminately rather than coupled with effective strategies.
- The framework operates best when environmental reinforcement (e.g., feedback, assessment design, leadership tone) aligns with its principles.
- The concept has been validated in multiple domains — education, business, sport — but context and culture shape its success.
How To
Objective
To cultivate a growth mindset within yourself or your organisation by shifting focus from innate ability to continuous learning, deliberate practice, and adaptive feedback.
Steps
- Reframe ability as learnable
Introduce the concept of neuroplasticity and share examples of improvement through practice to establish a foundation for belief in change. - Model curiosity and vulnerability
Leaders and educators should openly discuss their own learning journeys and mistakes to normalise experimentation. - Reward process, not just outcome
Provide recognition for effort, strategy, and persistence, especially when results are imperfect or in progress. - Use “yet” language
Embed the word yet in feedback and self-talk (“I haven’t mastered this yet”) to reinforce potential over permanence. - Give actionable feedback
Replace generic praise with specific, developmental feedback that identifies what can be improved and how. - Design for challenge
Set tasks slightly above current ability to maintain engagement and stretch capability (the “zone of proximal development”). - Encourage reflective practice
Build moments into workflow or curriculum for reflection on what worked, what didn’t, and what could change next time.
Tips
- Introduce short mindset micro-lessons at the start of team meetings or classes to embed shared language.
- Display and revisit examples of improvement to make progress visible.
- Pair learners or team members to share “failure stories” and lessons learned to normalise iteration.
Pitfalls
Token praise that emphasises effort without progress
Link effort explicitly to strategy and improvement outcomes.
Performance obsession where people hide mistakes
Celebrate experimentation and public learning.
Leadership hypocrisy where growth language isn’t modelled
Ensure leaders embody humility and openness to feedback.
Acceptance criteria
- Individuals and teams can articulate what growth mindset means in their own words.
- Reflection and feedback loops are visible in routines or rituals.
- Success metrics expand beyond performance to include learning and adaptability.
Tutorial
Scenario
A mid-level manager in a technology firm notices her team avoids complex projects, preferring tasks they know they can complete perfectly.
Performance reviews show competence but little innovation.
She decides to apply growth mindset principles to shift the culture toward learning and experimentation.
Walkthrough
The manager must decide whether to push for immediate performance gains or to invest in a slower, mindset-based culture change. She chooses the latter, recognising that long-term adaptability is a higher-value outcome.
Input
Existing performance review data, examples of avoided challenges, team meeting feedback.
Output
Revised performance criteria that value experimentation, reflection, and iterative improvement alongside delivery.
- Diagnose fixed-mindset signals
Identify fear-based language (“I’m not good at X,” “We’ll fail”) during meetings and one-to-ones. - Run a team session on neuroplasticity
Introduce the science behind learning and highlight personal examples of improvement. - Establish “learning goals”
Each team member defines a skill or behaviour they want to improve, with milestones reviewed monthly. - Redesign performance metrics
Add “learning agility” and “collaboration under uncertainty” to the review framework. - Model failure resilience
The manager shares her own mistakes in retrospectives and what she learned from them. - Reinforce progress
Use language like “not yet” and praise specific strategies rather than outcomes. - Reflect and adapt
At the end of the quarter, hold a retrospective focused on how attitudes toward challenge and effort have evolved.
If team members dismiss the mindset as a fad, the manager grounds discussions in data (e.g., productivity or innovation metrics) and personalises the benefits. If results stagnate, she revisits the balance between psychological safety and accountability.
After six months, the team consistently volunteers for stretch projects and reports lower anxiety about mistakes. The shift from “prove yourself” to “improve yourself” has become part of team identity.
Result
- Before → After Delta
- Before: Safe, predictable output; reluctance to take risks; low engagement in feedback loops.
- After: Visible curiosity, experimentation, and increased innovation with stronger team trust.
- Artefact Snapshot
- Artefact: “Growth Mindset Playbook – Q3 Pilot”
- Location: Shared drive under Team Culture / Learning Frameworks
Variations
- If implementing in education, replace performance metrics with assessment rubrics that include reflection and revision cycles.
- If team size is small, focus on one shared learning challenge rather than individual ones.
- If leadership turnover is high, document cultural principles in onboarding materials to preserve continuity.