True or false: When it comes to learning, metacognition (e.g., thinking about thinking) can be just as important as intelligence.
Research on growth mindset by Carol Dweck and others shows that people’s beliefs about the nature of intelligence affect their level of effort and in turn their performance.
What is the best way to learn from some text?
Restating the text in your own words is another form of “active learning.”
True or false: Intelligence is fixed at birth.
This false belief is sometimes called “fixed mindset.” In fact there’s plenty of evidence that IQ can increase over time given interventions like preschool or reading to a child.
You have a test coming up. What’s the best way to review the material?
Quizzes are a form of “active learning” that promotes better recall.
To which of the following should you not tailor your learning?
The idea that people have different primary learning styles is a myth with no evidence.
True or false: Learning should be spaced out over time.
Much research supports the idea that “spaced repetition” helps you retain knowledge over the long term.
True or false: Right-brained people learn differently from left-brained people.
Recent brain scan research provides no evidence for the idea that individuals are left-brain or right-brain dominant in the first place, much less that this supposed difference might affect learning.