Muradoglu Melis, Lassetter Bethany, Sewell Madison N, Ontai Lenna, Napolitano Christopher M, Dweck Carol, Trzesniewski Kali, Cimpian Andrei
Department of Psychology, Stanford University.
Department of Psychology, New York University.
Dev Psychol. 2025 Jan 13. doi: 10.1037/dev0001910.
Adults hold a broad range of beliefs about intellectual ability. Key examples include beliefs about its malleability, its distribution in the population, whether high levels of it ("brilliance") are necessary for success, its origins, and its responsiveness to intervention. Here, we examined the structure and motivational significance of this network of consequential beliefs in a sample of elementary school-age children (5- to 11-year-olds, = 231; 116 girls, 112 boys, three gender nonbinary children; predominantly White and Asian children from relatively high-income backgrounds). We assessed five beliefs: (a) growth mindsets (malleability), (b) universal mindsets (distribution), (c) brilliance beliefs (necessity for success), and beliefs about ability's (d) innateness and (e) responsiveness to intervention. Even among the youngest children, these beliefs were empirically distinguishable and also largely coherent, in that they related to each other in expected ways. Moreover, the five beliefs assessed here were differentially related to children's learning (vs. performance) goals, preference for challenging tasks, and evaluative concern (i.e., concern that mistakes will lead others to evaluate the self negatively). Even when adjusting for age, children with growth mindsets were oriented toward learning goals and preferred challenging tasks; children who believed ability has innate origins preferred performance goals; and younger (but not older) children who thought success required brilliance expressed more concern over being evaluated. These findings speak to the multifaceted nature of children's concepts of ability and highlight their significance for children's achievement-related attitudes and behavior in the early school years. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
成年人对智力能力持有广泛的信念。关键例子包括关于其可塑性、在人群中的分布、高水平的智力能力(“才华横溢”)是否是成功所必需的、其起源以及对干预的反应等信念。在此,我们在一个小学年龄段儿童样本(5至11岁,n = 231;116名女孩,112名男孩,3名性别非二元性别的儿童;主要是来自相对高收入背景的白人和亚洲儿童)中研究了这个由相关信念构成的网络的结构和动机意义。我们评估了五种信念:(a) 成长型思维模式(可塑性),(b) 普遍型思维模式(分布),(c) 才华信念(成功的必要性),以及关于能力的(d) 先天性和(e) 对干预的反应的信念。即使在最年幼的儿童中,这些信念在实证上也是可区分的,并且在很大程度上是连贯的,因为它们以预期的方式相互关联。此外,这里评估的五种信念与儿童的学习(相对于成绩)目标、对具有挑战性任务的偏好以及评价性关注(即担心错误会导致他人对自己进行负面评价)存在不同的关联。即使在调整年龄因素后,具有成长型思维模式的儿童倾向于学习目标并偏好具有挑战性的任务;相信能力具有先天性起源的儿童偏好成绩目标;而认为成功需要才华的较年幼(但不是较年长)儿童对被评价表现出更多担忧。这些发现说明了儿童能力概念的多面性,并凸显了它们在儿童早期学业成就相关态度和行为方面的重要性。(PsycInfo数据库记录 (c) 2025美国心理学会,保留所有权利)