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"Whether you think you can, or you think you can't — you're right." — Henry Ford

When Henry Ford first spoke these words, he couldn't have known the neuroscience behind them. As Ford aptly noted, human beings are not stagnant or fixed; they are dynamic and adaptable, with the ability to grow and change in response to their environment. It is this ability that makes learning such a wondrous journey. As educators, we have seen that if a student believes they can grow, learn, and push through difficulty, they're more likely to do exactly that. If they believe they can't — they'll disengage, avoid challenge, and confirm their own prediction.

We Can Change Our Brains

Through a process called neuroplasticity, the brain physically changes and reorganizes itself in response to experience, challenge, and learning, and this does not just happen in early childhood. Researchers have found that even brief learning experiences can produce real, measurable changes in brain wiring across one's lifespan (Xie et al., 2021). This is particularly true during adolescence, when the brain undergoes synaptic pruning, or the shedding of unused synaptic connections, to free up cognitive resources to support more frequently used connections.

During this time, the brain is remarkably sensitive to changes in its environment and to the messages it receives from peers and adults. For educators, this means it is the perfect time to teach young people about their brains and their remarkable ability to shape them (Fandakova & Hartley, 2020).

What Mindset Has to Do With It

Neuroplasticity explains what the brain can do. Mindset explains whether the student will work with the brain or against it.

Researchers define a growth mindset as the belief that abilities can be developed through effort and strategy. A fixed mindset is the opposite: the belief that you either have it or you don't. Students with a growth mindset tend to push through difficulty, whereas students with a fixed mindset tend to disengage. However, they do not do this because they're lazy, but because struggling confirms what they already fear: that they're just not capable (Yeager & Dweck, 2020).

Why Connecting the Two Matters

Good growth-mindset instruction doesn't just tell kids to believe in themselves — it teaches them how their brain works and how they can harness their brain's potential. Students should know that the brain responds to challenge in the same way a muscle responds to exercise. The more difficult the exercise, the greater the effect on muscle growth. Similarly, struggling through hard material isn't a sign you don't belong — it's literally how new neural connections get built (Maryati et al., 2020; Shi et al., 2022).

Understanding this can lead to a powerful shift in behavior. Students who see effort as the mechanism of growth, not just a personality trait of "hard workers," are more likely to remain committed to a task even when it gets difficult or uncomfortable.

How to Promote a Growth Mindset in Your Classroom

The Bottom Line: Neuroplasticity doesn't decide which students deserve to grow. The brain's capacity for change isn't determined by background, past performance, or zip code. Our job as educators is to build classrooms that prove Henry Ford right — where every student discovers that if they think they can, they will.