npj Science of Learning (Jul 2021)

Growth mindset and academic outcomes: a comparison of US and Chinese students

  • Xin Sun,
  • Shaylene Nancekivell,
  • Susan A. Gelman,
  • Priti Shah

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41539-021-00100-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Chinese students are more likely than US students to hold a malleable view of success in school, yet are more likely to hold fixed mindsets about intelligence. We demonstrate that this apparently contradictory pattern of cross-cultural differences holds true across multiple samples and is related to how students conceptualize intelligence and its relationship with academic achievement. Study 1 (N > 15,000) confirmed that US students endorsed more growth mindsets than Chinese students. Importantly, US students’ mathematics grades were positively related to growth mindsets with a medium-to-large effect, but for Chinese students, this association was slightly negative. Study 2 conceptually replicated Study 1 findings with US and Chinese college samples, and further discovered that cross-cultural differences in intelligence mindset beliefs corresponded to how students defined intelligence. Together, these studies demonstrated systematic cross-cultural differences in intelligence mindset and suggest that intelligence mindsets are not necessarily associated with academic motivation or success in the same way across cultures.