A GROWTH MINDSET PILOT INTERVENTION FOR A GRADUATE-LEVEL BIOSTATISTICS COURSE

Authors

  • BETTY S. LAI Lynch School of Education, Boston College
  • MICHELLE S. LIVINGS Georgia State University
  • MICHELLE P. D’AMICO Georgia State University
  • MATTHEW J. HAYAT Georgia State University
  • JEREMIAH WILLIAMS Georgia State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52041/serj.v17i2.161

Keywords:

Statistics education research, Persistence, Psychoeducation, Grit

Abstract

A growth mindset emphasizes the malleability of intelligence. The purpose of this pilot study was to implement and evaluate a growth mindset intervention for graduate students. Participants were twenty graduate students recruited from an introductory public health biostatistics class. Students were assessed three times during one semester. At each time point, students completed assessments of growth mindset, grit, social and emotional health, and attitudes toward statistics. Student grades were collected from the course instructor. Descriptive results indicate that growth mindset, grit, and social and emotional health fluctuated little over time. Mean scores for four attitudes toward statistics components improved over time. We found limited relationships between growth mindset and final grades. Growth mindset-based strategies may be more impactful at a persona, rather than academic, level.

First published November 2018 at Statistics Education Research Journal Archives

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Published

2018-11-30

Issue

Section

Regular Articles