We learned about the growth mindset within the 
first couple of months of this program.  The growth mindset, designed by
 Carol Dweck, is the belief that people can develop their skills and 
qualities.  The fixed mindset, contrary to the growth mindset, is the 
belief that people have a certain fixed set of skills and qualities that
 they have no control over.  After Dweck designed the growth mindset, 
she tried to apply this mindset to teaching.  From what I remember from 
our previous classes, it was said that students with growth mindset 
(believe that they can develop) bounce back quicker from set-backs and 
are more determined to improve their academic skills.  Students with 
fixed mindset, on the other hand, get discouraged easily and tend to 
just give up if they can’t do something right the first time.  
I was really amazed by the growth mindset when I 
first heard about it.  When I started to teach, I actually mentioned the
 growth vs fixed mindset to my students.  I firmly believed that all of 
my students are capable of getting an A in my classroom.  After a few 
months passed, however, I started developing a doubt in the growth 
mindset.  I saw that certain students failed nearly everything while 
other students got high A’s on everything.  As much as I even tutored 
the failing students, they continued to fail.  I started to accept the 
lost hope I had in certain sets of students.  I started catering only to
 the medium and high students because I thought that catering to the low
 students was a lost effort.  I remembered the actual moment that some 
of my hope was renewed in the growth mindset.  A student who fails 
everything in my class with extremely low scores joined the basketball 
team.  He was only allowed to play on the team if he held his GPA high 
enough.  On the next test he took, he scored 100% on the multiple choice
 section.  It was then that I saw that although many of the students may
 consistently be failing everything, this was a reflection of how much 
they cared rather than a reflection of their ability. 
After my hope was renewed in the growth mindset, I
 have been using it in my classroom.  Seeing that students have 
motivation issues rather than ability issues, I started pulling students
 aside and letting them know that if they scored higher than a 90% on a 
test, I would give them a pack of oreos or a deck of cards (whichever 
appeals to them more).  The students that I have made this deal with 
have been studying a lot and have actually been making it to the top 5 
scores of their sections.  
I have also been using an affective assessment to
 help me teach.  I gave students a survey of their interests and 
learning preferences on a homework assignment a few months ago.  
Usually, with I recycle homework assignments or hand them back to the 
students after they’re graded.  For this homework assignment, however, I
 have stored it in my classroom.  I glance at it once in a while when I 
want to get an idea of what type of interests or learning preferences a 
certain student has.    
