Amazon.com: Customer reviews: Mindset: The New Psychology of Success
Skip to main content
.us
Delivering to Lebanon 66952 Update location
All
EN
Hello, sign in
Account & Lists
Returns & Orders
Cart
All
Holiday Deals Disability Customer Support Medical Care Groceries Best Sellers Amazon Basics Prime New Releases Registry Today's Deals Customer Service Music Books Fashion Amazon Home Pharmacy Gift Cards Works with Alexa Toys & Games Sell Coupons Find a Gift Luxury Stores Automotive Smart Home Beauty & Personal Care Computers Home Improvement Video Games Household, Health & Baby Care Pet Supplies
Join Prime today for deals

  • Mindset: The New Psychology of Success
  • ›
  • Customer reviews

Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
4.6 out of 5
20,800 global ratings
5 star
75%
4 star
15%
3 star
6%
2 star
2%
1 star
2%
Mindset: The New Psychology of Success

Mindset: The New Psychology of Success

byCarol S. S. Dweck
Write a review
How customer reviews and ratings work

Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.

To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.

Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon
See All Buying Options

Top positive review

Positive reviews›
Nicholas
5.0 out of 5 starsLife-changing
Reviewed in the United States on May 30, 2015
Mindset is another book in the seemingly endless production line of self help Psychology books available. Amazon recommended it to me based on my past purchases, and I decided to give it a try. I can honestly say that this book was eye opening for me. It’s based on the premise that there are two mindsets present in all human beings: The Fixed Mindset and The Growth Mindset. People with the fixed mindset, according to the author, are people who would rather not challenge themselves because it may reveal to them any inadequacy or weakness in their skill level or knowledge base. Conversely, people who possess the growth mindset are people who, regardless if they fail, crave the opportunity to better themselves even if it means admitting that they do not know as much as they thought they did in a particular subject or discipline. The author also dispels the myth of intelligence and natural talent, bringing to light the evidence-based realization that intelligence can be nurtured and cultivated through study and constant, unremitting learning. One’s learning ability, or intelligence, much like the brain itself, is indeed malleable. Fascinating stuff. By the way, another book in the same vein as this one is “Talent is Overrated” by Geoff Colvin. I may have reviewed it a year or two ago – I will have to check the archives of my blog.

Halfway through the book I realized that I possessed traits and elements from both the fixed mindset and the growth mindset. I’m a lifelong learner, there’s no question about that. I’m ridiculed by most of my peers and friends for always reading and trying to learn more, but it’s who I am and who I've always been, unbeknownst to some. That being said, however, I can remember many times in my life when I was afraid to challenge myself because I felt like it would reveal weaknesses in my knowledge or skill. When I was younger, I used to abhor criticism; I felt like if someone criticized me it was a direct attack on who I was, so I’d respond by becoming defensive. Granted, most people will criticize you just to make themselves feel better or to put you down because they see you’re actually trying to do something; but if someone is more skilled than you are in something and he or she offers some constructive criticism, you should pay attention because that’s an invaluable tool for growth. I've learned that over the years without question. When I first started studying Karate (I was probably 11 or 12 years old), I was so full of passion for it. I used to go to my classes with a zest and zeal that rivaled the most enthusiastic of students, but I quickly realized, even though I thought I was a natural, that I had a lot of work to do before I could even consider myself a real student of the martial arts. At first I refused to accept that I wasn't as strong or as fast as I thought I was. I was stuck in the fixed mindset. I knew I was good at throwing kicks and punches because I taught myself how to fight. I didn't want to hear anything anyone else had to say. Eventually I learned the hard way that I would have to acquiesce to the instruction of my teachers, but the fixed mindset plagued me for many more years. It wasn't until I met my Jujitsu instructor about 5-6 years ago that I finally broke the fixed mindset outlook when it came to the martial arts. I was put on my back, painfully, over and over again by my instructor and learned, seemingly for the first time, about “emptying my cup” as the saying goes. I had to unlearn about 15 years of martial arts training and absorb, as a beginner, the teachings of my Jujitsu instructor. Let’s just say ice became my best friend.

My fixed mindset even found its way into my guitar studies. I was always a decent guitar player, I guess, but I didn't start growing as a guitarist until I met someone who shattered my view of my skill level while working at my last job. This guy was the most skilled guitarist I had ever met, and I was humbled by his expertise. I’m still no way near his level of guitar playing, but because of the little time I spent with him I am a much better guitarist than before I met him. It was after meeting this person that I decided to start playing with people who were substantially better than I was. I sought out guitarists all over the place and asked to learn from them. I’d walk around Union Square in the city listening to the other musicians; I'd pay real attention to what they were playing and how they were playing it. I’d walk up to a few guitarists who I thought played beautifully and pick their brains. Some were eager to teach and some didn't want to be bothered. All in all, I became good friends with two of the guitarists I met. They still reach out to me and teach me technique and theory, and, when I can, I continue my own independent music study. Growth mindset in action.

I've been sending a lot of my short fiction to professional, established writer friends of mine so that they can criticize and guide me in the hopes that I can be a better writer. A few weeks ago I sent one of my short stories to a writer I work with, and I asked him to be brutal. He read my story and sent me some feedback. I felt like when I was a little kid in school and one of my teachers gave me back one of my writing assignments adorned with her red markings. "Redundant!" "Comma here!" "Be more concise!" "Verb-subject agreement!" Good times. Anyway, my colleague gave me some useful advice and I immediately incorporated his suggestions into some of the stories I've already written. Consequently, I have also asked my uncle, who is an award-winning apologetics writer, to advise me and critique my writing. He’s been generous with his time and constructive with his advice. I will keep badgering him with grammar and syntax questions until he disowns me. It’s a price I’m willing to pay.

So, back to the book. There is a lot of truth in this book, and I’m probably going to read it again soon. At the end of the book there is a chart that outlines the fixed mindset pathway of thinking versus the growth mindset pathway of thinking. It briefly outlines what someone with each mindset would do, or how they would think, given a circumstance. I have printed this chart out and I keep it hanging on my wall in my room so that I can look at it every day. I still have some fixed mindset elements that seem to permeate my thinking, but I’m more cognizant about them now. I’m working toward becoming a fully growth mindset focused person. I’m a work in progress, like most people, so bear with me.

There are a lot of case studies of some great people in this book – Famous athletes, Actors, Politicians, Musicians, Teachers, Coaches – and each case study lends more credence to the author’s message: The Growth Mindset will help you achieve whatever it is you want to achieve. It’s a great book, and I recommend it to anyone struggling with honing his or her skills in anything. The author discusses how the fixed mindset and growth mindset is evident in every facet of life. Whether it is in parenting – how some parents instill a belief in their children that they are geniuses, and these children refuse to grow because they think there is no more growing to be done – or in our professional lives - how to learn from and adapt to unethical and dishonest colleagues (something I live with).
Read more
179 people found this helpful

Top critical review

Critical reviews›
Tony
VINE VOICE
3.0 out of 5 starsThis book is like panning for gold... there’s a lot of effort required for a few nuggets of gold.
Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 2019
I bought this book to help my daughter. She has quite a serious issue with fixed mindset, so I got the kindle version, which I now realise was a mistake. You see a kindle has this little tracker at the bottom of each page telling you how far through the book in terms of %. I was so determined to help my daughter that I sat down and read the first 25% in a single sitting. The supporting material was great, I’d read about what fixed mindset looks like, why people think like they do, and why it’s a problem. The next day I read the next 25%, lots more supporting information, and some examples about how this stuff can profoundly affect people’s growth, and how overcoming it can be profoundly life changing. Great! Next 25% of the book more of the same, but I figure you know maybe it’s just me, maybe some people take longer to understand the ramifications. Then at about 76%, the book talks about a “brainology class” used across 20 schools and how amazing the results have been... finally I think to myself we’re getting to the payoff.... “obviously this brainology or mindset workshop was performed with a large staff and isn’t easy to replicate at scale” ... ok I get that, but you’ve come up with a way to adapt this workshop, right? Two pages later... “the rest of this book will be about you!” Wait... what? By the fact that I picked up this book shows that either I already have a growth mindset and I’m looking to make it better, or I have a fixed mindset, but am looking to improve (also indicating that I’m aware of what needs fixing and want to grow)... so telling me to look at fixed mindset situations differently is great.... but how do I teach a child with a fixed mindset, that doesn’t realise they have a problem to change their thinking? It’s already been highlighted extensively in the book that people that don’t realise they have a fixed mindset, are unlikely to understand and appreciate the changes they need to make. How many psychologists does it take to change a lightbulb? Only one, but the lightbulb has to “want” to change first! So, if you’re one of those people that is aware they have a problem, know you need to change it, and are ready for the change, then this will be a great help (once you get past the first 75% of the book). There is a part of the book that helps you guide your children to a growth mindset (between about 79% and 82%), and I’m super thankful for those pages, and will implement them with excitement and optimism, after that it slides back into having the reader think about things differently and focus on internal mindsets and self-help. Then there’s a summary about how to progress your self-help and maintain your growth mindset. The book is done at about 85% and the rest is notes, bibliographical references, and other appendices. So I guess in summary, if we look at the sum total of the book (as 100%). 79% is supporting material, setting the scene; 6% is guidance (79% to 85%) and the remaining 15% is the usual supplementary material found at the end of non-fiction books. Perhaps I’m being too hard here, I may have missed some real gold nuggets here, but I really started to struggle at 70%. The book is solid and really helps you see fixed mindset for the damaging thing that it is (let’s face it if you don’t understand it after 75% of the book, then maybe you need to work harder at it) and really helps you see the trait in others, but ultimately I was overwhelmed with background, and underwhelmed with the self-help aspect.
Read more
22 people found this helpful

Sign in to filter reviews
Filtered by
1 starClear filter
450 total ratings, 211 with reviews

There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.

From the United States

K. Garcia
1.0 out of 5 stars Mindsets: Pseudoscience and Jargon
Reviewed in the United States on October 18, 2013
Verified Purchase
There is something really mindless and borderline about this book. Splitting is a core concept associated with the borderline personality having to do with their oversimplistic, dichotomous or black-and-white thinking. Ms. Dwerk homogenized parts of a bunch of popular self-help books into one attempting to methodically develop a genre best seller. Take a cool word, create a dichotomous relationship (haves and have nots, believers and non-believers, or, in this case the "growth mind set" versus not), then connect everything good and desirable on one side and everything undesirable on the other, and finally make vacuous associations with such blurry boundaries that it becomes too exhausting, tedious and of questionable value to disentangle her argument and you have MINDSETS: an exercise in self-promotion and the promotion of a pseudoscience and jargon. I had read this for a psychological reading club and the enterprise will be remembered as one of my life's singularly most valueless exercises. It is difficult to write any point-by-point review, because there is really no substance to this entire work.

As Officer Drebin of the Police Squad movies states "Nothing to see here!" There is no model of significance, nothing original or organized or unifying in this work. If I want to read that people can change or don't beat yourself up after your expectations are not met by the outcomes or if you don't succeed, try and try again, I'll reach for Dale Carnegie who less bombastic and more honest about his work. I'm sorry if I don't get how this reflects Ms. Dweck's competence as a psychologist and researcher. She makes herself sound like she is some brilliant person for wrapping such aphorisms into a buzzword and then incessantly repeating that buzzword until you have to keep a bottle of motrin at your desk to get through the reading. The book does not develop an original or sufficiently rich model to account in any meaningful way for the interface between how human beings experience the world and should choose their battles and approach optimizing outcomes. She uses buzzwords like success, but trying and trying is not necessarily about succeeding and succeeding is so much more than simply trying and trying. Yet this self-promoting book reads like some meaningless mantra for the self-deluded. Yet she continues to insist that here lies the answer to everything much like "The Secret" like other charlatans and cure-all potion sellers. Having devoted my entire life to the study of mental health and psychology, there is a body of work on personality disorders far richer and more interesting than the over-simplistic pseudo-conceptions Ms Dweck is propounding. If I were Stanford, I would be embarrassed that such trash was promoted from my hallowed halls.
74 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


NYer
1.0 out of 5 stars Not Terribly Persuasive
Reviewed in the United States on March 23, 2016
Verified Purchase
This book, which was recommended to me, was not very impressive.

It is extraordinarily repetitive and relies a great deal on anecdotal evidence, some of which has been called into question. For example, Marva Collins, a supposed miracle-worker inner city teacher, is mentioned several times. This ignores the fact that Collins's results supposedly stem from one hype-filled article that was picked up by other lazy reporters. Her results are in doubt. (The link to the article attached in support was deleted by Amazon. Google "Marva Collins" and "Chicago Sun Times".) As someone else here mentioned, her examples involving Tiger Woods and Malcolm Gladwell are questionable. It often seems as though she cherry picks successful people in the news without any real information about how they actually attained their success.

The author uses herself as an example much more than I find convincing or interesting. She seems not to realize that others may not see things her way. She recounts advice she gave her cousin as a youngster which is supposed to show her destiny as a psychologist when she seems like a youthful manipulator. She tells a story about a gaffe in a drugstore as to which her husband thought others were overreacting. I, however, understood why the other customers were upset. She quotes gushing notes of thanks from students that are terribly written notwithstanding that they are students at Columbia, which is supposed to be a top college. They also obviously are extremely self-serving.

She says that she has no idea if certain talents are inborn or can be developed. Apparently, pursuit of a "growth mindset" regardless of whether it actually has an impact is to be viewed as a good in itself.

Finally, she never addresses the most difficult cases that are bound to come up. What if you use the growth mindset, work extremely hard,and still fail?
40 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


Raymond Ullmer
1.0 out of 5 stars A single blog post stretched into a book
Reviewed in the United States on April 13, 2018
Verified Purchase
Like many, I came to this book by enthusiatic recommendations of others. The main driver, the explanation of fixed vs growth mindsets and their real life implications, is covered immediately in chapter 1. What then follows for hundreds of pages are case studies that seek to "prove" the theory. Finally, on page 223, comes a primer on how to make mindset changes. This too is written from a case study perspective, and ultimately leaves the reader at the end of the book feeling like the payoff chapter you've been waiting for never arrived. It all feels a bit like...an infomercial for something outside the book.

The thesis of fixed vs growth IS an interesting topic. The thing is: it's not new. Fixed, pre-determination is otherwise known as "post modernism", and growth-based, self- determination is "existentialism". I find it very ironic that politically unpopular existentialism - the thought that YOU, not your environment are in control of your outcome - has found a rabid new audience under the renamed "growth mindset"! I'll give Ms. Dweck credit for that trick alone.

It's a great idea, but the book itself is a shambles. If you read the first and last chapters, you'll have not missed anything. One star for at least providing the spark of an idea.
238 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


AdamAppleby
1.0 out of 5 stars Repetitive
Reviewed in the United States on September 16, 2018
Verified Purchase
This book could have easily been summed up in an article but instead it's a 240+ page book repeating essentially the same thing over and over and over. The book is about how your mindset, fixed or open, to challenges, beliefs, and overall life can have a great impact on how you adjust and what you become. As an example, if two children get an F on an assignment with different mindsets, the fixed will tend to think they're dumb and lose interest while the open will know they can learn and view it as a challenge.

That's it. I'm not being overly critical of the book or idea. That is the book stretched out using examples from sports, business, relationships, and pretty much areas where your mindset can help determine where you proceed when faced with a challenge.

I don't know how someone could give this five stars. I don't mean that to be rude but you're more or less reading the same idea on every page.
642 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


KC
1.0 out of 5 stars BORING
Reviewed in the United States on October 9, 2023
Verified Purchase
Absolutely boring. :)
Helpful
Report
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


Amazon Customer
1.0 out of 5 stars Great premise -- lacks substance
Reviewed in the United States on November 24, 2016
Verified Purchase
I fully believe in the book's central message, but the case is made in this book almost entirely with repetitive and lightly-documented subjective anecdotes. It becomes tiring. The model: "we asked a group of students to work through a relevant task. The FIXED-mindset students abandoned the task upon encountering initial difficulties. The GROWTH-mindset students persevered through the challenge in a manner that reflected improvement and portended future success in adult life." Little is said about how and when students were identified as belonging to either group or how their responses were measured. While reading, I began to suspect the "fixed" students were classified circuitously because they did not show perseverance during the study.

Data and studies are only broadly referred to.

The binary perspective of this book is hard to overcome as well. The book tends to frame humanity into one of either discrete camp based on how the subjects would answer a yes/no question about their capacity for improvement, with deep contrast in how the group outcomes are classified. It is hard to trust the thesis because it seems overstated.

Also, it is somewhat funny how players from the author's favorite team are identified as growth-minded players, while at least one highly successful rival player is characterized as fixed-minded. The golden athlete of this book, Tiger Woods, is repeatedly described as an ultimate growth achiever. Based on what we have learned about his response to difficulty the last ~7 years, the glowing description of his mindset seems comically wrong.
21 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


Jeff
1.0 out of 5 stars Self-promotion is a turn-off
Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2021
Verified Purchase
As a general rule, if an author begins with self-promotion I will lose interest. Such is the case with this one.

Dr. Dweck may very well be an expert in her field; an innovator whose work promises to revolutionize the self-improvement market, or how psychologists approach their patients and/or research. I don't know. All I know is that I could not get past the authorial fanfare, the vignettes, and gushing (implicit and explicit) about how amazing this 'discovery' of hers is, and how it's changing lives.

Pro tip: If you're still writing vignettes aimed at convincing your readers that your idea is worth something 50% of the way through, at best you're trying too hard.

It always seems to me that insightful ideas leading to meaningful change tend to sell themselves. No authorial gushing needed. Just straight talk and advice on common-sense application. This book delivered too little of the latter and far too much of the former.
14 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


Ray
1.0 out of 5 stars Nothing more than a 277 page infomercial
Reviewed in the United States on April 2, 2016
Verified Purchase
If you need to read a book to convince you that effort and positive thinking (a "growth mindset") are better than giving up and negative thinking (a "fixed mindset"), this book may be helpful. If you already know this, this book is an utter waste of time because there is absolutely nothing more to it and absolutely nothing new, psychologically or otherwise.

As a parent and a teacher what I expected to learn, and what the author continually insinuated she was going to tell me, was how to identify mindsets in others and strategies for encouraging change in those with a defeatist mindset. Instead she offers 212 mind- numbingly repetitive pages of anecdotes about successful vs. unsuccessful students, athletes, and CEOs, that merely describe attitudes peppered with tedious platitudes along the lines of “if at first you don’t succeed, try, try, again.”

It is not until the last chapter, “Changing Mindsets” that the author tells the reader she has developed a workshop which miraculously teaches people how to change their mindset. But instead of telling us how this is achieved or describing what actually happens in these workshops, she merely gives us a string of testimonials and informs us that she has developed a computer program called “Brainology”™ which mirrors these life-altering workshops. The End. You can go to a website to buy the"Brainology"™ program.
89 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


William Patry
1.0 out of 5 stars The Mindset of a Blowhard Egomaniac
Reviewed in the United States on December 29, 2007
Verified Purchase
I had read a reference to this book in another, scholarly book, and read the reviews on amazon before ordering it. It came yesterday and last night it went out with the trash, where in my mindset, it belongs. One gets all the insight one needs from the very first sentence of the book in which the author states her students commanded her to write the book. She had to, just had to share her remarkable insights with the world, and make it a better place. I spent an hour trying to salvage any reason for spending more time with it, but to no avail. The book is bloated beyond belief, repetitive, and written in a style that veers between messianic and Dr. Phil.

So why the positive reviews of the book? The message is positive and reassuring to those who earnestly want to improve their lives and those closest to them. Some people may have believed that such efforts were fruitless because they aren't "smart enough." This mindset, as the title indicates, can be our biggest obstacle to improvement. I agree completely. My complaint with the book is not with its thesis, but with the execution of the ideas, which is simply horrible, and the author's own mindset, that of a blowhard egomaniac, that is to blame. The book should have been reduced to a tight, popular magazine article.
89 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


Amazon Customer
1.0 out of 5 stars Missing Pages
Reviewed in the United States on June 19, 2023
Verified Purchase
The book is fantastic. It came missing pages 149-180, so I’m stuck wanting to finish it, my return window has passed, and I don’t want to purchase another one.
2 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


  • ←Previous page
  • Next page→

Need customer service?
‹ See all details for Mindset: The New Psychology of Success

Your recently viewed items and featured recommendations
›
View or edit your browsing history
After viewing product detail pages, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in.

Back to top
Get to Know Us
  • Careers
  • Amazon Newsletter
  • About Amazon
  • Accessibility
  • Sustainability
  • Press Center
  • Investor Relations
  • Amazon Devices
  • Amazon Science
Make Money with Us
  • Start Selling with Amazon
  • Sell apps on Amazon
  • Supply to Amazon
  • Protect & Build Your Brand
  • Become an Affiliate
  • Become a Delivery Driver
  • Start a Package Delivery Business
  • Advertise Your Products
  • Self-Publish with Us
  • Host an Amazon Hub
  • ›See More Ways to Make Money
Amazon Payment Products
  • Amazon Visa
  • Amazon Store Card
  • Amazon Secured Card
  • Amazon Business Card
  • Shop with Points
  • Credit Card Marketplace
  • Reload Your Balance
  • Gift Cards
  • Amazon Currency Converter
Let Us Help You
  • Your Account
  • Your Orders
  • Shipping Rates & Policies
  • Amazon Prime
  • Returns & Replacements
  • Manage Your Content and Devices
  • Your Recalls and Product Safety Alerts
  • Help
English
United States
Amazon Music
Stream millions
of songs
Amazon Advertising
Find, attract, and
engage customers
6pm
Score deals
on fashion brands
AbeBooks
Books, art
& collectibles
ACX
Audiobook Publishing
Made Easy
Sell on Amazon
Start a Selling Account
Amazon Business
Everything For
Your Business
 
Amp
Host your own live radio show with
music you love
Amazon Fresh
Groceries & More
Right To Your Door
AmazonGlobal
Ship Orders
Internationally
Home Services
Experienced Pros
Happiness Guarantee
Amazon Web Services
Scalable Cloud
Computing Services
Audible
Listen to Books & Original
Audio Performances
Box Office Mojo
Find Movie
Box Office Data
 
Goodreads
Book reviews
& recommendations
IMDb
Movies, TV
& Celebrities
IMDbPro
Get Info Entertainment
Professionals Need
Kindle Direct Publishing
Indie Digital & Print Publishing
Made Easy
Amazon Photos
Unlimited Photo Storage
Free With Prime
Prime Video Direct
Video Distribution
Made Easy
Shopbop
Designer
Fashion Brands
 
Amazon Warehouse
Great Deals on
Quality Used Products
Whole Foods Market
America’s Healthiest
Grocery Store
Woot!
Deals and
Shenanigans
Zappos
Shoes &
Clothing
Ring
Smart Home
Security Systems
eero WiFi
Stream 4K Video
in Every Room
Blink
Smart Security
for Every Home
 
  Neighbors App
Real-Time Crime
& Safety Alerts
Amazon Subscription Boxes
Top subscription boxes – right to your door
PillPack
Pharmacy Simplified
Amazon Renewed
Like-new products
you can trust
   
  • Conditions of Use
  • Privacy Notice
  • Your Ads Privacy Choices
© 1996-2023, Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates