Jonathan E. Martin
June 6, 2014

Toughing it Out

Jonathan E. Martin
June 6, 2014
Jonathan E. Martin
June 6, 2014

Education journalist Paul Tough strikes again. Author of the much-talked about book, How Children Succeed, Tough has returned with an important feature in the recent New York Times magazine, entitled “Who Gets to Graduate?”

As Tough reports, college graduation rates for economically disadvantaged students are devastatingly disappointing. Statistics show that bottom quartile family income students with SAT scores between 1200-1600 (out of 1600) are less likely to graduate college by age 24 (44%) than top quartile family income students with SAT scores between 800 and 999 (54%).

In the piece, Tough highlights the University of Texas at Austin’s efforts – overseen by Psychology Professor David Yeager – to improve the retention and graduation rates of disadvantaged students. Yeager, a proponent of Carol Dweck, is a researcher on the rise. His work, situated in the field that is becoming known as “academic mindsets,” is also being advanced at the K-12 level. (Those programs, by University of Chicago and Stanford, will be featured in the forthcoming second Think Tank Special Report).

In Texas, the focus is on the mindsets of belonging and growth (rather than fixed), for which short, less than an hour, interventions have been designed and implemented – and have been shown to have an astoundingly positive impact. By arming college students before they are challenged by the beliefs that they “don’t belong here,” or “they’re just not smart enough to succeed,” Yeager and team are helping these students know how to bat back, knock down, and overcome these doubts when they inevitably arise.

As Tough writes, “the disadvantaged students who had experienced the belonging and mind-set messages did significantly better: 86 percent of them had completed 12 credits or more by Christmas. They had cut the gap between themselves and the advantaged students in half … If the effect of the intervention persists over the next three years (as it did in [another] study), it could mean hundreds of first-generation students graduating from U.T. in 2016 who otherwise wouldn’t have graduated on time, if ever.”

In conversations among SSATB Think Tank members about this same topic, we came to recognize that the value of academic mindsets, and assessing our incoming students for them, is not so much in improving our process of admissions selection as it is in providing an opportunity for better orienting students. If we can determine whether and which students have poor “academic mindsets,” we can better design orientation programs to support their successful integration into our school. Paul Tough’s excellent piece shows us one way to do so.

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Jonathan E. Martin
June 6, 2014

Jonathan Martin has 15 years experience as an independent school head, most recently as Head of St. Gregory College Preparatory School (AZ). He holds degrees from Harvard University (BA, Government, cum laude); Starr King School for the Ministry (M.Div., Unitarian ministry preparation); and the University of San Francisco School of Education (MA, Private School Administration). In 2008, he was a Visiting Fellow at the Klingenstein Center at Teachers College, Columbia University. He previously headed Saklan Valley School (CA) and Maybeck High School (CA). In the first stage of his educational career, he taught History, Social Studies, and English at Maybeck, and served in a role equivalent to Dean of Students. From 2010-12 he was a member of the board, and Program & Professional Development Chair, of the Independent School Association of the Southwest (ISAS). He was a contributor to the new National Association of Independent Schools publication A Strategic Imperative: A Guide to Becoming a School of the Future.

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Education journalist Paul Tough strikes again. Author of the much-talked about book, How Children Succeed, Tough has returned with an important feature in the recent New York Times magazine, entitled “Who Gets to Graduate?”

As Tough reports, college graduation rates for economically disadvantaged students are devastatingly disappointing. Statistics show that bottom quartile family income students with SAT scores between 1200-1600 (out of 1600) are less likely to graduate college by age 24 (44%) than top quartile family income students with SAT scores between 800 and 999 (54%).

In the piece, Tough highlights the University of Texas at Austin’s efforts – overseen by Psychology Professor David Yeager – to improve the retention and graduation rates of disadvantaged students. Yeager, a proponent of Carol Dweck, is a researcher on the rise. His work, situated in the field that is becoming known as “academic mindsets,” is also being advanced at the K-12 level. (Those programs, by University of Chicago and Stanford, will be featured in the forthcoming second Think Tank Special Report).

In Texas, the focus is on the mindsets of belonging and growth (rather than fixed), for which short, less than an hour, interventions have been designed and implemented – and have been shown to have an astoundingly positive impact. By arming college students before they are challenged by the beliefs that they “don’t belong here,” or “they’re just not smart enough to succeed,” Yeager and team are helping these students know how to bat back, knock down, and overcome these doubts when they inevitably arise.

As Tough writes, “the disadvantaged students who had experienced the belonging and mind-set messages did significantly better: 86 percent of them had completed 12 credits or more by Christmas. They had cut the gap between themselves and the advantaged students in half … If the effect of the intervention persists over the next three years (as it did in [another] study), it could mean hundreds of first-generation students graduating from U.T. in 2016 who otherwise wouldn’t have graduated on time, if ever.”

In conversations among SSATB Think Tank members about this same topic, we came to recognize that the value of academic mindsets, and assessing our incoming students for them, is not so much in improving our process of admissions selection as it is in providing an opportunity for better orienting students. If we can determine whether and which students have poor “academic mindsets,” we can better design orientation programs to support their successful integration into our school. Paul Tough’s excellent piece shows us one way to do so.