Mindset _ The New Psychology of Success - Carol S. Dweck [121]
Tiger is a hugely ambitious man: Ibid., 220.
Mia Hamm tells us: Hamm, Go for the Goal, 201.
“They saw that we truly love”: Ibid., 243.
“There was a time”: John McEnroe with James Kaplan, You Cannot Be Serious (New York: Berkley, 2002), 10.
“Some people don’t want to rehearse”: Ibid., 155.
Finding #2: Ommundsen, “Implicit Theories of Ability,” 141–157.
“You can’t leave”: Lowe, Michael Jordan Speaks, 99.
Michael Jordan embraced his failures: Ibid., 107.
Here’s how Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: Wooden, Wooden, 100.
For example, he hoped desperately: McEnroe, You Cannot Be Serious, 112.
“God, if I lose to Patrick”: Ibid., 259.
Here’s how failure motivated him: Ibid., 119.
In 1981, McEnroe bought: Ibid., 274.
Here’s how failure motivated Sergio Garcia: Callahan, In Search of Tiger, 164, 169.
Finding #3: Ommundsen, “Implicit Theories of Ability and Self-Regulation Strategies,” Educational Psychology, 2003, 23, 141–157; “Self-Handicapping Strategies,” Psychology of Sport and Exercise, 2001 2, 139–156.
How come Michael Jordan’s skill: Lowe, Michael Jordan Speaks, 177.
Butch Harmon, the renowned coach: Callahan, In Search of Tiger, 75.
With this in mind, Tiger’s dad: Ibid., 237.
“I know my game”: Ibid., 219.
“I love working on shots”: Ibid., 300.
“He’s twelve”: Ibid., 23.
Mark O’Meara, Woods’s golf partner: Ibid., 25.
For example, when he didn’t: McEnroe, You Cannot Be Serious, 166.
In fact, rather than combating: Ibid., 29.
He wished someone else: Ibid., 207.
“The system let me get away”: Ibid., 190.
“In our society”: Lowe, Michael Jordan Speaks, 37.
Coach John Wooden claims: Wooden, Wooden, 113.
“I believe, for example”: Ibid., 78.
When asked before a game: Charlie Nobles, “Johnson Is Gone, So Bucs, Move On,” The New York Times, November 20, 2003; Dave Anderson, “Regarding Johnson, Jets Should Just Say No,” The New York Times, November 21, 2003.
“I am a team player, but”: Anderson, “Regarding Johnson.”
When Nyad hatched her plan: Kersey, Unstoppable, 212.
Iciss Tillis is a college: Viv Bernstein, “The Picture Doesn’t Tell the Story,” The New York Times, January 24, 2004.
It’s six-foot-three Candace Parker: Ira Berkow, “Stardom Awaits a Prodigy and Assist Goes to Her Father,” The New York Times, January 20, 2004.
CHAPTER 5. BUSINESS: MINDSET AND LEADERSHIP
According to Malcolm Gladwell: Malcolm Gladwell, “The Talent Myth,” The New Yorker, July 22, 2002.
Remember the study where we interviewed: That study was performed with Ying-yi Hong, C. Y. Chiu, Derek Lin, and Wendy Wan.
And remember how we put students: This research was conducted with Claudia Mueller.
Jim Collins set out to discover: Jim Collins, Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap . . . and Others Don’t (New York: HarperCollins, 2001).
“They used to call me the prosecutor”: Ibid., 75.
Robert Wood and Albert Bandura: Robert Wood and Albert Bandura, “Impact of Conceptions of Ability on Self-Regulatory Mechanisms and Complex Decision Making,” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 56 (1989), 407–415.
As Collins puts it: Collins, Good to Great, 26.
Says Collins: The good-to-great Kroger: Ibid., 65–69.
According to James Surowiecki: James Surowiecki, “Blame Iacocca: How the Former Chrysler CEO Caused the Corporate Scandals,” Slate, July 24, 2002.
Warren Bennis, the leadership guru: Warren Bennis, On Becoming a Leader (Cambridge, MA: Perseus Publishing, 1989/2003), xxix.
Iacocca wasn’t like that: Lee Iacocca with William Novak, Iacocca: An Autobiography (New York: Bantam Books, 1984).
What’s more, “If Henry was king”: Ibid., 101.
“I was His Majesty’s special protégé”: Ibid., 83.
“All of us . . . lived the good life”: Ibid., 101.
“I had always clung to the idea”: Ibid., 144.
He wondered whether Henry Ford: Doron P. Levin, Behind the Wheel at Chrysler: The Iacocca Legacy (New York: Harcourt Brace, 1995), 31.
“You don’t realize what a favor”: Ibid., 231.
Just a few years after: Iacocca, Iacocca, xvii.
Within a short time, however: Levin, Behind the Wheel at Chrysler.
In an editorial: Ibid., 312.