Dangers of a fixed mindset: implications of self-theories research for computer science education


Autoria(s): Thomas, Lynda; Murphy, L.
Contribuinte(s)

Department of Computer Science

Software Engineering

Data(s)

26/09/2008

26/09/2008

01/06/2008

Resumo

Murphy, L. and Thomas, L. 2008. Dangers of a fixed mindset: implications of self-theories research for computer science education. In Proceedings of the 13th Annual Conference on innovation and Technology in Computer Science Education (Madrid, Spain, June 30 - July 02, 2008). ITiCSE '08. ACM, New York, NY, 271-275.

Psychology studies have shown that students' beliefs about their own intelligence--whether they view intelligence as fixed or malleable-have an important influence on student development and achievement. Yet the impact of these theories on success in Computer Science (CS) has not been directly investigated. Self-theories research has shown that students with a fixed mindset are more likely to exhibit a helpless response to substantial challenges and to experience decreases in self-esteem during college. Those with a growth mindset welcome challenges, displaying a mastery-oriented response, and maintaining self-esteem, primarily because they attribute failure to a lack of effort rather than a lack of intellectual ability. This paper introduces self-theories research, and relates this research to several issues in CS Education. We then make suggestions for how CS educators can consider self-theories in their teaching and research.

Non peer reviewed

Formato

5

Identificador

Thomas , L & Murphy , L 2008 , ' Dangers of a fixed mindset: implications of self-theories research for computer science education ' pp. 271-275 .

PURE: 77608

PURE UUID: fdddc96f-e671-471c-a00b-96e8485f3fbf

dspace: 2160/651

http://hdl.handle.net/2160/651

Idioma(s)

eng

Tipo

/dk/atira/pure/researchoutput/researchoutputtypes/contributiontoconference/paper

Conference paper

Relação

Direitos