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An analysis of learned helplessness: II. The processing of success.

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TLDR
Compared to mastery-oriented children, helpless children underestimated the number of success (and overestimated the numberOf failures), did not view successes as indicative of ability, and did not expect the successes to continue, so successes are less salient, less predictive, and less enduring--less successful.
Abstract
Helpless children attribute their failures to lack of ability and view them as insurmountable. Mastery-oriented children, in contrast, tend to emphasize motivational factors and to view failure as surmountable. Although the performance of the two groups is usually identical during success of prior to failure, past research suggests that these groups may well differ in the degree to which they perceive that their successes are replicable and hence that their failures are avoidable. The present study was concerned with the nature of such differences. Children performed a task on which they encountered success and then failure. Half were asked a series of questions about their performance after success and half after failure. Striking differences emerged: Compared to mastery-oriented children, helpless children underestimated the number of success (and overestimated the number of failures), did not view successes as indicative of ability, and did not expect the successes to continue. subsequent failure led them to devalue ;their performance but left the mastery-oriented children undaunted. Thus, for helpless children, successes are less salient, less predictive, and less enduring--less successful.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A social-cognitive approach to motivation and personality

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a research-based model that accounts for these patterns in terms of underlying psychological processes, and place the model in its broadest context and examine its implications for our understanding of motivational and personality processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Illusion and well-being: a social psychological perspective on mental health

TL;DR: Research suggesting that certain illusions may be adaptive for mental health and well-being is reviewed, examining evidence that a set of interrelated positive illusions—namely, unrealistically positive self-evaluations, exaggerated perceptions of control or mastery, and unrealistic optimism—can serve a wide variety of cognitive, affective, and social functions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Motivational processes affecting learning.

TL;DR: In this article, Dweck describes adaptive and maladaptive motivational patterns and presents a research-based model of motivational processes and argues that this approach has important implications for practice and the design of interventions to change maladaptative motivational processes, and observes that empirically based interventions may prevent current achievement discrepancies.
BookDOI

From Neurons to Neighborhoods: The Science of Early Childhood Development

TL;DR: From Neurons to Neighborhoods as discussed by the authors presents the evidence about "brain wiring" and how children learn to learn to speak, think, and regulate their behavior, and examines the effect of the climate-family, child care, community-within which the child grows.
Journal ArticleDOI

Goals: An approach to motivation and achievement.

TL;DR: In this paper, a framework in which goals are proposed to be central determinants of achievement patterns was tested and it was found that learning goals, in which individuals seek to increase their competence, were predicted to promote challenge-seeking and a mastery-oriented response to failure regardless of perceived ability.
References
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Book

Experimental Design: Procedures for the Behavioral Sciences

Roger E. Kirk
TL;DR: This chapter discusses research strategies and the Control of Nuisance Variables, as well as randomly Randomized Factorial Design with Three or More Treatments and Randomized Block Factorial design, and Confounded Factorial Designs: Designs with Group-Interaction Confounding.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of expectations and attributions in the alleviation of learned helplessness.

TL;DR: In this paper, a study was conducted to determine whether altering attributions for failure would enable learned helpless children to deal more effectively with failure in an experimental problem-solving situation.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Analysis of Learned Helplessness: Continuous Changes in Performance, Strategy, and Achievement Cognitions Following Failure.

TL;DR: This paper explored helpless versus mastery-oriented differences in the nature, timing, and relative frequency of a variety of achievement-r elated cognitions by continuously monitoring verbalizations following failure and found that helpless children made the expected attributions for failure to lack of ability; mastery oriented children made surprisingly few attributions but instead engaged in self-monitoring and self-instructions.