Read + Write + Report
Home | Start a blog | About Orble | FAQ | Blogs | Writers | Paid | My Orble | Login

Lumosity answers: Is your intelligence fixed?

September 19th 2009 08:35
Lumosity fixed intelligence?
Signature Tune








Research in the field of cognitive science is currently at an explosive stage where it will likely remain until the brain and all of its intricate workings are mapped and understood






Is Intelligence Fixed?
According to an article published by Carol Dweck in the journal Educational Leadership, the type of praise students get is very much a factor in how they view their intelligence. And, how students view their intelligence is very much connected to their academic performance over time.

Students who were continually praised for being smart thought that intelligence was a fixed trait that they couldn’t do anything to affect and which would manifest itself (or not) regardless of the effort put into a particular endeavor. Students who were praised for their efforts, on the other hand, associated their success with the amount of work they put in and, thus, concluded that their level of intelligence was malleable and dependent on their continued development and willingness to learn.

Students who believed that they were as smart as they were born to be inclined towards activities that would confirm or show-off their intelligence and avoided those activities which required effort while students who believed in the power of work to increase ability were much more likely to take on challenges and persist through them. The first group was also more likely to hide or lie about mistakes and deficiencies than the second group, which was inclined to correct them. Research in psychology and neuroscience supports this second group of students with evidence suggesting that the brain is much more plastic than ever thought before.


We at Lumosity get a lot of inquiries from people asking how they stack up against the rest of the world with regard to their performance on various games (sound familiar? “How smart am I really?”). The BPI scoring rubric that we use instead measures improvement over time, recording the effect that a player’s efforts have on their scores. Thing is, when it comes to brain games, it doesn’t really matter (and might even negatively affect scores by discouraging players) what a player’s relative score is. We hope that everyone plays to improve him or herself rather than to reconfirm or undermine an intelligence identity. Rather than make someone feel dumb, a challenging curriculum should be viewed as an opportunity to exercise the brain (which, like a muscle, will grow stronger!) and to practice recovering from setbacks to develop new learning strategies.

Harness your growth potential! Intellectual development is not the natural unfolding of a finite number of smarts.

See: Dweck, Carol S. Educational Leadership, October 2007 | Volume 65 | Number 2: Early Intervention at Every Age. “The Perils and Promises of Praise,” Pages 34-39.


52
Vote
Add To: del.icio.us Digg Furl Spurl.net StumbleUpon Yahoo


   
subscribe to this blog 


   

   


Comments
2 Comments. [ Add A Comment ]

Comment by Wilson Pon

September 19th 2009 13:44
Honestly, Katyzzz. Most of the geniuses are not happy, as they're forcing to do something that they don't like to deal with! Sometimes, it's good to be an ordinary person...

Comment by katyzzz

September 19th 2009 21:16
Very true, Wilson, but the true ones don't ask to be that way, and as for us, it's a good thing to have a little extra don't you think?

Add A Comment

To create a fully formatted comment please click here.


CLICK HERE TO LOGIN | CLICK HERE TO REGISTER

Name or Orble Tag
Home Page (optional)
Comments
Bold Italic Underline Strikethrough Separator Left Center Right Separator Quote Insert Link Insert Email
Notify me of replies
Your Email Address
(optional)
(required for reply notification)
Submit
More Posts
24 Posts
37 Posts
38 Posts
5439 Posts dating from November 2006
Email Subscription
Receive e-mail notifications of new posts on this blog:
0
Moderated by katyzzz
Copyright © 2012 On Topic Media PTY LTD. All Rights Reserved. Design by Vimu.com.
On Topic Media ZPages: Sydney |  Melbourne |  Brisbane |  London |  Birmingham |  Leeds     [ Advertise ] [ Contact Us ] [ Privacy Policy ]