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发表于 2013-5-4 22:44:47 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式
记录i我的GMAT每一天,每天10:30PM 以后,更新,感谢小分队的牛牛们阅读资料分享!!

————————感觉自己太放任自己了,只要坚持一段时间就会成为习惯的,每天10点后练习及时和越障,练完后贴第二天的练习。。欢迎监督!!坚持!!!
                                                                                                                                                                                                                              2013/5/9 22:20

                           想起小学的背诵的一句话:困难像弹簧,你弱它就强,你强它就弱。
                                                                                                                    2013/11/30 19:44     
        
这是停了多久了,狂补作业来咯。 2014都快来了,还不做阅读你想干嘛??                                                                                                                                                                              
                                            2013/12/25 16:25
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来自 82#
 楼主| 发表于 2013-6-20 23:56:01 | 只看该作者
感谢神猴的分享~此帖子将作为阅读小分队的纲领性文章。新人必读。by iamyingjie~

今后三次都由我暂代”风随心动01“发帖,今天的主题我特意开了个mindset专题,也算是经管中的 personal or organizational management。

speed与obstacle的格式是为了向 HBR 致敬,两篇均选自这里。

Speed部分是大牛Carol Dweck的HBR Ideacast interview文字整理,附上podcast,感兴趣可以顺便练听力。(为了保证对话完整性,今天速度都比较长。enjoy it~)

Obstacle是另两位大牛针对Carol Dweck的mindset理论的一些 excerpt and application.

Part I: Speed

Article 1
The Right Mindset for Success
by HBR IdeaCast  |   6:32 PM January 12, 2012
An interview with Carol Dweck, professor at Stanford University and author of Mindset: The New Psychology of Success.


[Time 1]
TRANSCRIPT

SARAH GREEN: Welcome to the HBR IdeaCast from Harvard Business Review. I'm Sarah Green. Today, we're going to be asking why some people reach their potential while other people who are just as talented don't. To do that, we're going to dig into the science of persistence and praise with Carol Dweck, Stanford professor and the auther of Mindset: The New Psychology of Success. Carol, thanks so much for talking with us.

CAROL DWECK: A pleasure to be here today.

SARAH GREEN: So your research has shown that the talented people who find success have a growth mindset. Tell us a little bit about what a growth mindset is exactly.

CAROL DWECK: Let me start with a fixed mindset. A fixed mindset is when people believe their basic qualities, their intelligence, their talents, their abilities, are just fixed traits. They have a certain amount, and that's that. But other people have a growth mindset. They believe that even basic talents and abilities can be developed over time through experience, mentorship, and so on. And these are the people who go for it. They're not always worried about how smart they are, how they'll look, what a mistake will mean. They challenge themselves and grow.

SARAH GREEN: So I think we've all experienced maybe the strange sensation of, say, going back to your high school reunion, whether it's the 10 year, or the 20, or the 30 year, or something, and seeing the person you thought was going to be the next President of the United States or something who just-- their career has just not panned out. In that case, you never intend to be that person. You never intend to be the person who has the fixed mindset. So how does someone fall into that trap?

CAROL DWECK: That's a great example because you think oh, this person's most likely to succeed. They've gotten the A's. They're president of the student body. But because of their success, they may have fallen into a fixed mindset. They may have believed all the hype, the idea that they just have it. And they become afraid of making mistakes. They become afraid of tarnishing their image.

And because they are fearful of venturing out of their comfort zone, they don't take the risks or develop the abilities they're capable of. You go back to the same reunion, and you see people you thought were not likely to succeed, and they've really done amazing things. These are the people who maybe didn't have an image to uphold, didn't feel the weight of other people's expectations, and just followed their passions and developed their abilities.
[442 words]

[Time 2]
SARAH GREEN: So I'm wondering as you talk about that, is this a conundrum that we can get into at any time? If you become CEO of a company, say, at 45 or 55, can you suddenly find yourself falling into the same trap?

CAROL DWECK: It's possible. Many people have told me that when they were promoted into a prestigious position, they suddenly felt, now I have to have all the answers. Now, my period of growth is over. I have to be a fully mature person who knows everything. So yes, at any point, you can fall into that trap. People who become CEOs suddenly feel they have to be gods goddesses, and not people who say, gee, I don't know. Let's talk about it. Let's think about it. Let's feel our way through this problem.

SARAH GREEN: So how can we go about making sure, in our own selves, that we stay in the growth mindset or we encourage the growth mindset if we may recognize that that's not where we're most comfortable?

CAROL DWECK: Yes, we have to keep in mind the hallmarks of a growth mindset. In a growth mindset, challenges are exciting rather than threatening. So rather than thinking, oh, I'm going to reveal my weaknesses, you say, wow, here's a chance to grow. If you find yourself afraid of challenges, get yourself into a growth mindset and think about all of the growth potential in following this opportunity, even if it's out of your comfort zone.

If you react to a setback defensively, wanting to hide it, wanting to make up excuses for it, you're in a fixed mindset. And instead, ask what can I learn from this experience that can help me go forward next time? In the fixed mindset, you're so focused on the outcome. Will I look good? Will I live up to my reputation? Will people think I'm brilliant?

In a growth mindset, you're focused on the process, the process that you engage in to bring about your successes, and the processes you engaged in that may have created your failures, but you can learn from them and do better the next time. So every time you feel yourself sinking into fixed mindset thinking, worrying about a challenge, feeling measured by a setback, worrying about the outcome rather than the process, try to slip yourself over into more growth mindset thinking.
[402 words]

[Time 3]
SARAH GREEN: And what if you're trying to encourage a growth mindset in someone who's reporting to you? Because I'd imagine, for instance, a lot of managers would like to have someone who is the straight A student, right, who they can then hire that person and think they'll get right to work. And I think it can be baffling for some people when someone that talented doesn't perform up to standard. If you want to push someone who's really talented into a growth mindset, how would you proceed?

CAROL DWECK: Great question. First of all, yes. A lot of companies hire people with great pedigree, straight A. But [? Patrick Welsh ?] once said, these pedigrees don't tell you about the passion and the drive to get things done. So what message should a manager or leader give to new recruits that would put them into more of a growth mindset?

First, I think the message from the top is really important, that we value passion, dedication, growth, and learning, not genius.

SARAH GREEN: Mm.

CAROL DWECK: Second, we don't expect that you've arrive here fully formed. We expect that you've arrive here ready to learn. Third, we expect you to stretch beyond your comfort zone and take reasonable risks, not to do the same thing you're good at over and over and stay in your comfort zone. Fourth, we value process here, and we reward process. We reward taking on big but reasonable challenges. We reward pursuing them doggedly. We reward teamwork. And even if a project has not reached fruition or become successful, we reward that you've engaged in in a wholehearted and smart way.

SARAH GREEN: Mm.

CAROL DWECK: So the companies now that are thriving are the ones that give this message. And also, my research has shown, contrary to popular opinion, you don't praise talent. You don't praised ability. You praised process.
[318 words]

[Time 4]
SARAH GREEN: Mm. I would love it if you could talk a little more about that because that's actually a piece of research that has changed the way my friends who are parents actually praise their kids, and I just think it's fascinating.

CAROL DWECK: We've done a lot of work now showing that praising someone's talent puts them into a fixed mindset. The whole self-esteem movement taught us erroneously that praising intelligence, talent, abilities would foster self-confidence, self-esteem, and everything great would follow. But we've found it backfires. People who are praised for talent now worry about doing the next thing, about taking on the hard task, and not looking talented, tarnishing that reputation for brilliance. So instead, they'll stick to their comfort zone and get really defensive when they hit setbacks.

So what should we praise? The effort, the strategies, the doggedness and persistence, the grit people show, the resilience that they show in the face of obstacles, that bouncing back when things go wrong and knowing what to try next. So I think a huge part of promoting a growth mindset in the workplace is to convey those values of process, to give feedback, to reward people engaging in the process, and not just a successful outcome.

SARAH GREEN: Mm. I wanted to ask you a little bit about the flip side of that, about giving-- in a situation where there's negative feedback to be given. Because I think we've all been in situations at work where we've worked on something that's-- the project has come up short. It's not good enough. And I think, in those situations, there's a natural tendency to say, well, but we worked really hard on it! And then, usually the answer comes back, well, that doesn't matter. The product isn't good enough. So what's a better way to have that kind of interaction?

CAROL DWECK: I think that kind of conversation can be critical. And I think the person who's giving the feedback needs to focus, as I'm saying, on [? the process ?] but not just the effort. Everyone's putting it-- or believing they're putting in-- a lot of effort to everything. How they engaged in the process, maybe as a team, what strategies they tried, how they gauged when and whether those strategies were being successful, whether they were sensitive enough to change strategies when they were starting to get the negative feedback. So how they went forward, how they corrected themselves, and why in the end it might not have worked and what they might do differently next time.

One CEO I talked to recently said he rewards that value added, being able to put knowledge and skills back into the company, even when a project itself has not been successful.
[463 words]

[Time 5]
SARAH GREEN: Can you say a little more about That What you mean by that putting back into the company?

CAROL DWECK: So what did a team or a persona learn from an effort even when it wasn't successful? Many successful people-- Einstein, Thomas Edison-- have said they've learned more from their failures than often from their successes. So many huge breakthroughs came after a number of huge failures that provided learning experiences. So you're not going to reward someone just because they failed, obviously not. But what did the journey teach them that will help them and others in the company become successful the next time?

So as people are engaging in a process, in a project, they're monitoring what worked and what didn't with an eye toward the future. And the more they can feed that back into the company to make it more a communal learning experience, the more that is reward worthy.

SARAH GREEN: Mm. I want to get a little further afield for a moment than the world of business and ask you-- so many of your studies and a lot of your research has focused on students and how they respond to praise in those kinds of settings. And as we were talking about, this I'm realizing that a lot of we're talking about is reprogramming and deprogramming ourselves or people we work with from ways we've been used to experiencing praise and thinking about success. How would you think our education system would be better able to produce people who were persistent, creative, innovative people, lifelong risk taking learners? How would our education system need to change in order to produce people like that?

CAROL DWECK: That's a great question. We've always produced creative people, the mavericks. And I'm worried now, with all the emphasis on high stakes testing, doing well on the test, getting perfect scores, that we are subverting what we've always been good at. I think the message has to go out in the educational system, and I'm working really hard with leaders to do this, that the name of the game is a learning.

We actually have a program for students that teaches them that they're in charge of their brains, that their brain is kind of like a muscle that grows stronger with use, and that every time they stretch themselves to learn something new, their brains form new connections, and they get smarter over time. We want to empower students to be motivated to grow their brains, and that's done by stretching, by being passionate about something, by learning new things, by welcoming things that are hard, by seeing a period of confusion as a period that's going to create new neurons.
[455 words]

[The Rest]
SARAH GREEN: Mm.

CAROL DWECK: The more our classrooms are organized around stretching, and growing, and being comfortable with confusion and setbacks, the more we are going to create growth mindset students and growth mindset leaders.

SARAH GREEN: It's interesting because I think that to be comfortable with confusion takes a certain amount of boldness, not just on the person who's learning, but on the teacher or the manager as well. You have to be OK with your people who you're trying to lead being confused.

CAROL DWECK: Yes, and you have to be OK with yourself being confused because teachers and managers need growth mindsets not just about the students or employees, they need it for themselves. A teacher, a leader, they are learners. They're the ones that are leading us in learning and should be modeling being confused, being comfortable, being out of their comfort zone, knowing how to go get information or create teams that'll move us out of a period of confusion into clarity. So they need growth mindsets about their own skills, their own talents, their own abilities over time.

SARAH GREEN: And what strikes me is that this is something that, no matter what your actual talent level or ability level is, it seems applicable. If you go back to our education system, most of the national discussion focuses on the students it's not serving at the lower end, the C students who aren't getting by. But as we've been talking today, a lot about it doesn't really work for the A students either who are getting those easy A's and learning that success should come easily.

CAROL DWECK: Yes.

SARAH GREEN: And I could see the same thing happening in a corporation.

CAROL DWECK: Yes, because what's happening is all the success and all the praise is leading-- our research shows-- is leading people to think, the people at the top of the heap, yes, I have it. I'm the person who doesn't have to work hard to be smart. I'm the person who's already smart. Students who have coasted to easy A's learn the name of the game is to do it without looking like you're straining. So yeah, I think the people at the top have fallen into bad habits.

SARAH GREEN: Mm.

CAROL DWECK: And this is a time of tremendous change where, like it or not, you're going to have periods of confusion. Like it or not, you're going to turn into a novice over and over again. And we need to be comfortable with struggle, not just effort, but struggle, confusion.

SARAH GREEN: Well, it sounds a little bit exhausting but also very rewarding, I think. Carol, thank you again so much. I just really, really enjoyed this conversation.

CAROL DWECK: I enjoyed it greatly.

SARAH GREEN: That was Stanford's Carol Dweck. Her book is Mindset. For more, visit hbr.org.
[482 words]

Source: HBR
http://blogs.hbr.org/ideacast/2012/01/the-right-mindset-for-success.html



Part II: Obstacle

Article 2
Do You Have a Growth Mindset?
by John Hagel III and John Seely Brown  |  10:29 AM November 23, 2010


Mindset is everything. If that statement seems too strong, consider that we bring these basic assumptions to every decision and action we make. Left unexamined, they may unnecessarily restrict us or lead us in the wrong direction altogether. Perception may not truly be reality, but when it comes to how we approach challenges and opportunities, mindset determines the world we encounter and possibilities we apprehend. Achieving the power of pull requires us to make our assumptions explicit and examine them in different contexts — testing, challenging and refining.

As we began to discuss in our last post, adapting to the Big Shift and harnessing the potential of pull requires embracing a new mindset. This posting will focus on another key set of assumptions.

In her 2006 book, Mindset: The New Psychology of Success, Stanford Professor Carol Dweckdistinguishes two extremes of the mindsets people tend to have about their basic qualities:

•        In a fixed mindset, "your qualities are carved in stone." Whatever skills, talents, and capabilities you have are predetermined and finite. Whatever you lack, you will continue to lack. This fixed mindset applies not just to your own qualities, but to the qualities of others.

•        In a growth mindset, "your basic qualities are things you can cultivate through your efforts...everyone can change and grow through application and experience." Qualities like intelligence are a starting point, but success comes as a result of effort, learning, and persistence.

The distinction between fixed and growth mindsets has tremendous implications — as individuals and organizations — for how we address the growing pressures around us.

The Mindset Paradox: The greatest threat to success is avoiding failure. One of the most provocative aspects of Dweck's work is what it says about our approach to challenges. In a fixed mindset, you avoid challenging situations that might lead to failure because success depends upon protecting and promoting your set of fixed qualities and concealing your deficiencies. If you do fail, you focus on rationalizing the failure rather than learning from it and developing your capabilities. With a growth mindset, you focus on learning and development rather than failure and actively pursue the types of challenges that will likely lead to both learning and failure. This sounds a lot like the questing disposition we have discussed previously.

Mindset profoundly shapes key business practices:

Business Ecosystems. If you have a fixed mindset, you believe that there are a finite set of smart people and valuable resources outside your company. The challenge is how to identify, connect with and mobilize them to deliver more value to the marketplace — static resources tied together in a static ecosystem. The ecosystem benefits from the network effects of adding more and more participants because more diverse capabilities are connected and accessible.

If you believe that both the resources and the ecosystem itself are dynamic, then the role of the ecosystem is not just to connect and mobilize existing resources but to build relationships that help all participants get better faster. This leads to a more powerful form of increasing returns — not just network effects but new mechanisms to accelerate learning and performance improvement — as each participant learns faster as more and more participants join the ecosystem.

Talent Management. A fixed mindset leads you to focus almost exclusively on attracting and retaining talent. The assumption: each person's skills and capabilities are set. You will tend to devote too many resources to those with a perceived stock of knowledge and overlook (and eventually lose) employees with limited stocks but great learning potential. Worse, because you underestimate the value of learning and development, you won't likely get the most out of those employees you do value.

With a growth mindset, you understand that individual and organizational capabilities can be cultivated and developed, to improve performance and to expand in new directions. You focus more on talent development, creating work environments and practices that enable employees, regardless of work classification, to develop new skills and to learn by working with others, by problem-solving and experimentation.

Relationship-building. A fixed mindset fosters a zero-sum view of the world: if you win, I lose. With a fixed and finite set of value, the only question is how to allocate it. This perspective fosters conflict and mistrust and, not surprisingly, relationships governed by relative power, tend to be transactional and are rigidly defined to protect each party's share of the value.

A growth mindset fosters a broader view of the possibilities: by working together, we can create more value than if we work individually. While there are still issues around allocation, relationships are cultivated based on a goal of creating an even bigger pie. These relationships center on improving the performance of all participants, and the process of creating value together fosters trust. The levels of collaboration and trust deepen with time, creating a more valuable relationship.

Mindset may be destiny but it is changeable. While mindset has a profound impact on our ability to harness the power of pull, Dweck (displaying her growth mindset) offers hope: "Mindsets are an important part of your personality, but you can change them. Just by knowing about the two mindsets, you can start thinking and reacting in new ways."

The future belongs to those who can adopt a growth mindset. Those with a fixed mindset will likely be increasingly stressed and overwhelmed by mounting performance pressures and sustained uncertainty. Worse, the more they avoid failure, the more susceptible these individuals and organizations can be, not learning from mistakes and missing opportunities.

What assumptions do you make about the world and how do they play out in your decisions? What techniques have been useful for exposing your unexamined assumptions? Have you succeeded in actually changing your mindset?
[948 words]

1m47s'
1m27s
1m14s
1m47s
1m34s

obstacle :4m19s
today i feel so good
/first ,the first line,the audio ,thevoice of the hostess is really nice and i just imagine when i prepare my toefl listening,if i can practice with this kind of voice, it's fairly fantastic.
second,this topic is meaningful, as i read this passage, i map a image of last month ,i was worrying about my test and depressing for questioning that "my IQ has any problem " ,but now ,i am support this growth mindest ,so i only believe that nothing is a  problem ,but repeating and continuing failure and standing up,you can do it ! “

to my lover GMAT ,i love you so much !!
来自 112#
 楼主| 发表于 2013-7-27 15:59:15 | 只看该作者
挖出来觉得适合写作用的表达:Large fraction of
大批 。。。A explain B ,A是B出现的原因。
With unprecedented speed to do sth 以绝无仅有的速度
Ramp up 增加
Jump-start 启动,助动
Trigger 引起 触发
Enigmatic 神秘莫测
Is inflated by  被夸大了
Bone of contention 争论的焦点
Get sth intact 使。。完整
Keep it that way 保持那样
Ground breaking work 开创性的文章

Strive to 尽力做某事
Do sth in the presence of 在有什么的情况下做某事
Then came the most +adj part,然后就到了最。。的部分(可做作文段开头)
Hallmark品质特点,使具有特点
Sth can give insight into 能够对。。更深入的了解
Destined to become sth 注定成为。。。
Minions on the Ground May Be Leaders in the Sky 这个可以作为不同的人在不同领域会表现出优势。。
Sort out 挑选出
来自 222#
 楼主| 发表于 2014-1-12 00:13:38 | 只看该作者
some significant and distinctive netflix 's culture :

High performance:

We’re a team, not a family
We’re like a pro sports team,
not a kid’s recreational team
Netflix leaders
hire, develop and cut smartly,
so we have stars in every position

But unlimited loyalty to a shrinking firm, or to an ineffective employee, is not what we are about

severance package解雇金补偿

Many people love our culture, and stay a long time
They thrive on excellence and candor and change
They would be disappointed if given a severance package, but lots of mutual warmth and respect
Some people, however, value job security and stability over performance, and don’t like our culture
They feel fearful at Netflix
They are sometimes bitter if let go, and feel that we are political place to work
We’re getting better at attracting only the former, and helping the latter realize we are not right for them

Freedom & Responsibility

Market shifts due to new technology or competitors or business models
Company is unable to adapt quickly
because the employees are extremely good at following the existing processes, and process adherence is the value system
Company generally grinds painfully into irrelevance

sometimes long-term simplicity is achieved only through bursts of complexity to rework current systems

Instead of a
Culture of Process Adherence,
We have a Culture of
Creativity and Self-Discipline,
Freedom and Responsibility

You may have heard preventing error is cheaper than fixing it
Yes, in manufacturing or medicine, but…
Not so in creative environments
“there is no policy or tracking”
There is also no clothing policy at Netflix,
but no one comes to work naked
Lesson: you don’t need policies for everything

Take from Netflix only when it is inefficient to not take, and inconsequential
“taking” means, for example, printing personal documents at work or making personal calls on work phone: inconsequential and inefficient to avoid




Summary of
Freedom & Responsibility:

As We Grow, Minimize Rules
Inhibit Chaos with Ever More
High Performance People

Flexibility is More Important
than Efficiency in the Long Term

Context,instead of control

The best managers figure out how to get great outcomes by setting the appropriate context, rather than by trying to control their people

Investing in context
This is why we do new employee college, frequent department meetings, and why we are so open internally about strategies and results

Pay

The art of compensation is answering the Three Tests for each employee:
What could person get elsewhere?
What would we pay for replacement?
What would we pay to keep that person?
---If they had a bigger offer elsewhere

Whether Netflix is prospering or floundering, we pay at the top of the market
i.e., sports teams with losing records still pay talent the market rate

Employees stay because they are passionate about their work, and well paid, not because of a deferred compensation system.

Development:

Formalized development is rarely effective, and we don’t try to do it
e.g., Mentor assignment, rotation around a firm,  multi-year career paths, etc.
沙发
 楼主| 发表于 2013-5-4 22:46:40 | 只看该作者
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板凳
 楼主| 发表于 2013-5-4 22:57:07 | 只看该作者
第一篇:差五行
第二篇:差五行
第三篇:差两行
第四篇:差四行
第五篇:差八行  

寝室内有同学打电话,呜呜好苦B
地板
 楼主| 发表于 2013-5-4 22:58:30 | 只看该作者
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5#
 楼主| 发表于 2013-5-4 23:07:03 | 只看该作者
7:04S 没怎么看明白,明天加油
6#
发表于 2013-5-5 02:47:51 | 只看该作者
求加入……?
7#
 楼主| 发表于 2013-5-8 23:20:04 | 只看该作者
olivia瓜瓜 发表于 2013-5-4 23:07
7:04S 没怎么看明白,明天加油

好啊,一个人无人监督的,每天10:30 发阅读材料。。前两天都出去玩了,,,自责中!!
8#
 楼主| 发表于 2013-5-8 23:25:38 | 只看该作者
vicnan 发表于 2013-5-5 02:47
求加入……?

好啊,一个人无人监督的,每天10:30 发阅读材料。。前两天都出去玩了,,,自责中!!
9#
 楼主| 发表于 2013-5-8 23:27:23 | 只看该作者
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10#
 楼主| 发表于 2013-5-9 22:22:09 | 只看该作者
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