Measuring Academic Mindset in Economics Courses
Abstract
Understanding relevance, belonging, and growth mindset (RBG) has be-
come a focal point in economics education for improving diversity. Previous
literature suggests students from underrepresented groups have lower RBG
(Bayer et al., 2020) and improving RBG leads to higher academic success
(Broda et al., 2018). Before developing interventions to improve RBG and
persistence in economics, it is important to understand which students are
most at-risk of having low RBG. This paper proposes an aggregate measure of
academic mindset including elements of RBG and investigates how students’
demographic characteristics predict their initial academic mindset when en-
tering an economics course. This paper also investigates determinants of an
economics-specific mindset index. The sample consists of 3,212 students, 45
courses, 35 instructors, and 24 U.S. institutions and finds that students who
identify as male tend to have higher academic mindset scores than those who
do not identify as male, and this result seems driven by economics-specific attitudes. First generation college students (FGCS) also exhibit a lower initial
academic mindset. The probability that non-male and FGCS students have
a lower initial mindset is larger in introductory courses relative to upper-level
courses. Future research should consider targeting these groups for interventions.