3.1 What is a growth mindset?
A growth mindset is the belief that abilities and intelligence can develop through effort and learning. With this mindset, failures become opportunities to improve, and setbacks are seen as part of the learning process.
Activity 5: Exploring your mindset
Complete a short self-assessment to determine whether you tend towards a fixed or growth mindset. Reflect on how this influences your response to setbacks. Consider one area where adopting a growth mindset could change how you approach research setbacks. For example:
- Fixed mindset: ‘I failed, so I’m not good at this.’
- Growth mindset: ‘I failed, but I can learn and improve.’
Below are a few options, pick the one that works best for you.
- Psychology Today: Growth Mindset Test [Tip: hold Ctrl and click a link to open it in a new tab. (Hide tip)] This one is quick to do and helps you to see where you fall on the mindset scale.
- IDRlabs Growth Mindset / Fixed Mindset Test This is based on Carol Dweck’s work and offers a more detailed self‐assessment.
- UNC Mindset Quiz (PDF) A printable worksheet version; useful if you would like a paper version to work through instead.
In this video, Prof. Francesco Crea discusses how researchers can stay motivated over time by connecting their work to meaningful impact. He reflects on how setbacks can be reframed as part of a larger journey, helping to sustain focus, purpose, and engagement in research.
