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Description:
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Ryan Gottfredson, Ph.D. is a mental success coach and cutting-edge leadership consultant, author, trainer, and researcher. He helps improve organizations, leaders, teams, and employees by improving their mindsets. Ryan is currently a leadership and management professor at the Mihaylo College of Business and Economics at California State University-Fullerton (CSUF). He holds a Ph.D. in Organizational Behavior and Human Resources from Indiana University, and a B.A. from Brigham Young University. Ryan is the author of “Success Mindsets: The Key to Unlocking Greater Success in Your Life, Work, & Leadership.” (Morgan James Publishing) -
How do we tap into the “being” element of leadership? -
different types of mindset: -
Fixed vs. Growth mindset -
Open vs. closed mindset -
Prevention vs. promotion mindset -
Inward vs. outward -
Continuum of positive and negative. -
The more we are towards the positive, the better we interact with our environment. -
Innate beliefs about our ability to change affect how we interact with the world. -
With a fixed mindset, we internalize failure as though it means we are a failure. -
What kinds of interventions can help improve our mindset? -
Engage in interventions to promote growth mindset but if the culture doesn’t support it, there’s no point. -
How Jethro and Ryan each reacted when doing poorly in a class in their freshman year of college. -
Our mindsets are foundational to everything we do. They shape how we see the world, and how we operate in the world. -
Assess teacher’s mindset across the school and determine what our collective mindsets are across the school and what does that teach our students. -
How a school changed their growth mindsets. -
We take on the mindsets of our collective culture. -
When people have a fixed mindset they focus on looking good. -
When we are emphasizing grades and not learning and growing, we are emphasizing a fixed mindset. -
Fixed vs. Growth mindset -
90% of our thinking feeling acting is driven subconsciously. What drives that? Our mindsets. -
Study about when kids faced difficult questions. -
When we don’t believe we can improve, and we fail, we feel that we are failures. -
Growth mindset - when we have that belief that we can change, we see growth as an opportunity to learn. -
50/50 growth vs. fixed -
Intervention for growth mindsets.
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