Will Power: Grit, Self-Control, and Achievement
Angela Lee Duckworth, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Psychology, Positive Psychology Center, University of Pennsylvania
Family Action Network (FAN), North Shore Country Day School,
and North Shore Academy proudly present
Will Power: Grit, Self-Control, and Achievement
Angela Lee Duckworth, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Psychology, Positive Psychology
Center, University of Pennsylvania
Thursday, Nov. 29, 2012
7:00 PM – 9:00 PM
North Shore Country Day School
Diller Street Theater
310 Green Bay Rd., Winnetka, IL
There is no registration necessary for FAN events - they are free and open to the public.
INFO: familyactionnetwork.net
What if it takes more than high grades, good test scores and
innate intelligence to succeed? What if there are non-cognitive skills that are
better predictors of success, and character traits that are more effective in helping
your child achieve than those factors and skills that are measured by our
schools? FAN began this conversation in
September of this year with their program featuring New York Times writer Paul
Tough, author of How Children Succeed, the hot new bestseller that provides an
in-depth profile of the work of Angela Lee Duckworth, Ph.D., an assistant professor
of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, working within the Positive Psychology
Center as a top protégé of Martin Seligman, Ph.D., the original developer of
the filed of positive psychology.
Dr. Duckworth will explain the role of certain non-cognitive
skills in success and achievement for both children and adults. She will focus
on “grit” (“the perseverance and passion for a long-term goal”) and “self-control”
(“staying on task in spite of temptation”) to demonstrate the more critical
role these traits play than talent and self-esteem. Dr. Duckworth’s research indicates
that the right balance of grit and self-control in the face of temptation,
frustration and distraction is the key determinant for accomplishment. She will
discuss research that shows what these qualities predict, how they differ from
talent and what she knows about cultivating the development of these “non-IQ
competencies” in children and adults.
Dr. Duckworth is an experienced classroom teacher and a
former McKinsey consultant. She holds an AB magna cum laude in advanced studies
neurobiology from Harvard College, an M.Sc. with distinction in neuroscience
from the University of Oxford and an M.A. and Ph.D. in psychology from Penn.
Please join us to hear from one of our nation’s top scientists about this much
talked about area of research that is changing the thinking of leaders in schools
and workplaces alike.
|