A values-aligned intervention fosters growth mindset–supportive teaching and reduces inequality in educational outcomes

Author:

Hecht Cameron A.1ORCID,Bryan Christopher J.2ORCID,Yeager David S.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology and Population Research Center, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712

2. Department of Business, Government, and Society, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712

Abstract

Group-based educational disparities are smaller in classrooms where teachers express a belief that students can improve their abilities. However, a scalable method for motivating teachers to adopt such growth mindset–supportive teaching practices has remained elusive. In part, this is because teachers often already face overwhelming demands on their time and attention and have reason to be skeptical of the professional development advice they receive from researchers and other experts. We designed an intervention that overcame these obstacles and successfully motivated high-school teachers to adopt specific practices that support students’ growth mindsets. The intervention used the values-alignment approach. This approach motivates behavioral change by framing a desired behavior as aligned with a core value—one that is an important criterion for status and admiration in the relevant social reference group. First, using qualitative interviews and a nationally representative survey of teachers, we identified a relevant core value: inspiring students’ enthusiastic engagement with learning. Next, we designed a ~45-min, self-administered, online intervention that persuaded teachers to view growth mindset–supportive practices as a way to foster such student engagement and thus live up to that value. We randomly assigned 155 teachers (5,393 students) to receive the intervention and 164 teachers (6,167 students) to receive a control module. The growth mindset–supportive teaching intervention successfully promoted teachers’ adoption of the suggested practices, overcoming major barriers to changing teachers’ classroom practices that other scalable approaches have failed to surmount. The intervention also substantially improved student achievement in socioeconomically disadvantaged classes, reducing inequality in educational outcomes.

Funder

National Science Foundation

HHS | National Institutes of Health

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Yidan Prize Foundation

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference66 articles.

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3. R. Chetty J. Friedman E. Saez N. Turner D. Yagan “Mobility report cards: The role of colleges in intergenerational mobility” (National Bureau of Economic Research 2017) 10.3386/w23618 20 December 2021.

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5. P. Tough, The Inequality Machine: How College Divides Us (Mariner Books, 2021).

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