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The impact of parents’ implicit theories of intelligence on young children’s approaches to learning: The serial-mediating roles of children’s achievement motivations and goal orientations

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Abstract

While prior research has indicated a link between children’s implicit theories of intelligence (i.e., beliefs about the malleability of intelligence or abilities) and their learning behaviors, it remains unclear whether this association expands across generations. This study explored the impact of parents’ incremental theories of intelligence on preschooler’ approaches to learning (characterized by competence motivation, attention/persistence and attitude toward learning) and analyzed the inner influencing mechanism from a perspective of motivations. The data was collected through online questionnaire surveys, involving a total of 402 Chinese parents of children aged 3 to 6. The results showed that children whose parents held stronger incremental theories had better approaches to learning. Moreover, children’s achievement motivations and goal orientations served as serial mediators in this relationship. Specifically, parental incremental theories were correlated with children’s lower fear of failure and greater hope for success. Children’s hope for success was positively associated with their learning goal orientation and performance goal orientation. In contrast, children’s fear of failure was positively related to their performance goal orientation but negatively to their learning goal orientation. Ultimately, children’s learning goal orientation was positively linked to their competence motivation, attention/persistence and attitude toward learning, while children’s performance goal orientation was detrimental to their competence motivation and attitude toward learning but conducive to their attention/persistence. The findings provide important evidence for the spillover effect of pedagogical agents’ implicit theories and expand the evidence in the field of preschoolers’ approaches to learning.

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Data availability

The data used in this study is available for academic research under https://www.scidb.cn/en/anonymous/YVFGcnV1.

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Acknowledgements

The authors would like to acknowledge the parents who generously gave their time to participate.

Funding

This work was supported by National Natural Sciences Foundation of China (No. 31571140).

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Contributions

All authors contributed to the study conception and design. Material preparation, data collection, formal analysis and original draft preparation were mainly performed by Qiuke Zhu. Review, editing, supervision and funding acquisition were mainly performed by Su Li.

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Correspondence to Su Li.

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Ethical approval

This research was reviewed by the institutional review board of the Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences (No. H15044). All recruitment and data collection procedures were in line with the national research committees’ ethical standards.

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The parents were given informed consent for the study.

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The authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

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Zhu, Q., Li, S. The impact of parents’ implicit theories of intelligence on young children’s approaches to learning: The serial-mediating roles of children’s achievement motivations and goal orientations. Curr Psychol 43, 17443–17463 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-024-05679-1

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