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Growth Mindset

                                   All individuals have their own unique set of motivators. Motivators can be positive or
                                   negative, such as personal achievement, financial gain, fear of parental disapproval, the
                                   threat of failure, a desire to impress someone, and much more. Motivators can also be
                                   external or internal. If you are motivated by external factors (your parents, circum-
                MOTIVATORS
            Ideas or goals that move a   stances, luck, grades or instructors’ feedback, and so on), you have an external locus of
               person to action.
                                   control. If you are motivated by internal factors (values and attitudes), you have an
                                   internal locus of control.
                                      Most people experience external and internal factors in combination. However,
                                   if you are more often motivated by internal factors, Carol Dweck’s research indicates
                                   that you are likely to experience greater success. Why? Because you cannot control
       1                           the external factors. The only things you can control are the internal factors, such as
       CHAPTER                       mindset—the perception that talent and intelligence can develop with effort—and
                                   your attitude or mindset. Through her work, Dweck developed the idea of a growth
                                   she established that this mindset promotes persistence toward goals as well as suc-
                                   cessful goal achievement. “This view creates a love of learning and resilience that is
                                   essential for great accomplishment,” says Dweck. 26
                                      According to Dweck, people demonstrating a fixed mindset believe that they were
                                   born with an unchangeable level of talent and intelligence. Because of this view, they
                                   tend to work and risk less. Like Seligman, Dweck is focused on the ability to adjust
                                   attitude. As she puts it, “You have a choice. . . . Mindsets are just beliefs. They’re pow-
                                   erful beliefs, but they’re just something in your mind, and you can change your mind.”
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                                   Combine her work with Seligman’s, and you have a solid case for the value of effort,
                                   optimism, and persistence.


                                   Academic Integrity

                                   Each action you take in college has an effect that shapes your immediate experience
            ACADEMIC INTEGRITY
                                   and perhaps your life. Having academic integrity means taking actions based on ethics
           Following a code of moral   (your sense of what is right to do) and a value of hard work. The International Center
             values in all aspects of
                                   for Academic Integrity (ICAI) defines academic integrity as a commitment to five fun-
             academic life, such as
           classes, assignments, tests,   damental values: 28
              papers, projects, and
            relationships with students   ■  Honesty. Honesty defines the pursuit of knowledge and implies a search for
                                      truth in your classwork, papers, and lab reports, and your teamwork with
                  and faculty.
                                      other students.
                                    ■  Trust. Trust means being true to your word. Mutual trust—between instructor
                                      and student, as well as among students—makes the exchange of ideas possible.
                                    ■  Fairness. Instructors must create a fair academic environment where students are
                                      judged against clear standards and in which procedures are well defined.
                                    ■  Respect. In a respectful academic environment, both students and instructors
                                      accept and honor a wide range of opinions, even if the opinions are contrary to
                                      core beliefs.
                                    ■  Responsibility. You are responsible for making choices that will provide you with
                                      the best education—choices that reflect fairness and honesty.

                                      Students are not the only ones who need to act with integrity. Bill Taylor, emeritus
                                   professor of political science at Oakton Community College in Des Plaines, Illinois,
                                   wrote a letter to his students explaining that academic integrity makes requirements of
                                   both students and instructors. For example, while students need to come to class on
                                   time and prepared to contribute, instructors need to arrive on time prepared to teach;
                                   while students need to hand in their own work, instructors need to give relevant assign-
                                   ments and grade fairly. 29



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