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Artists and designers are preparing for rapidly changing and competitive careers in creative fields that require a healthy dose of resiliency to persevere. However, little is known on how students within these fields become more self-efficacious, gritty, situated toward a

Artists and designers are preparing for rapidly changing and competitive careers in creative fields that require a healthy dose of resiliency to persevere. However, little is known on how students within these fields become more self-efficacious, gritty, situated toward a growth mindset, and persistent over time. This mixed-method action research study investigates how undergraduate arts and design college students approach and navigate perceptions of failure as well as incorporates an intervention course designed to increase their self-efficacy, growth mindset, and academic persistence. Participants were eighteen arts and design students representing a variety of disciplines from an eight-week, one-unit, 300-level course that utilized arts-based methods, mindfulness, and active reflection. After the course, students had significant changes in their self-efficacy and academic persistence as well as moderate significant change in their fixed mindset.
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    Title
    • The failure project: self-efficacy, mindset, grit and navigating perceived failures in design and the arts
    Contributors
    Date Created
    2018
    Resource Type
  • Text
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    Note
    • thesis
      Partial requirement for: Ed.D., Arizona State University, 2018
    • bibliography
      Includes bibliographical references (pages 179-192)
    • Field of study: Educational leadership and policy studies

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    Statement of Responsibility

    by Megan Workmon Larsen

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