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Implicit theories moderate the relation of positive future fantasies to academic outcomes
Authors:Heather Barry Kappes  Elizabeth J. Stephens  Gabriele Oettingen
Affiliation:a Psychology Department, New York University, 6 Washington Place, 7th Floor, New York 10003, United States
b Department of Psychology, University of Hamburg, Von-Melle-Park 5 Hamburg, D-20146, Germany
Abstract:We hypothesized and observed that the degree to which students endorsed entity theories - the view that intelligence is fixed rather than malleable - attenuated the affective benefits and exacerbated the achievement drawbacks of positive fantasies in the academic domain. Positive fantasies only predicted low anger and anxiety for schoolchildren who did not strongly endorse entity theories (Study 1), and positive fantasies only predicted poor final school grades for vocational students who did strongly endorse entity theories (Study 2). An experiment indicated that for university students with stronger entity theories, positive fantasies demanded relatively little attention (Study 3), suggesting that positive fantasies obscure the opportunity for the preemptive self-regulation which promotes successful performance.
Keywords:Fantasies about the future   Daydream   Implicit theories   Lay theories of intelligence   Achievement emotions   Academic achievement   Motivation
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