TEST-YO!
BrainResearch-backed

Implicit Theories · Dweck 2006

Are You Fixed or Growing?

Is your mind a fortress — or still growing? 16 honest questions.

  • 5 min
  • 16 questions
  • No signup
  • Free
Start the test

Full result at the end — no email needed

Possible results · which one are you?

  • Fixed Fortress
  • At the Crossroads
  • Rising Learner
  • Open Grower
Growth Mindset test — cover illustration

Quick answer

Is your mind a fortress — or still growing? 16 honest questions.

  • 16 questions · ~5 min
  • Based on: Dweck, C. S. (2006)
  • Cost: free · no signup

About this test

A 16-item form drawn from Carol Dweck's Implicit Theories scales (intelligence, personality, and character). Eight items describe a fixed view of ability and character, eight describe a growth view. Your answers are summed (fixed items reverse-scored) to place you on a single axis from Fixed Fortress to Open Grower.

Methodology

Based on Dweck, C.S. (1999) Self-theories: Their role in motivation, personality and development, and Dweck, C.S. (2006) Mindset: The New Psychology of Success. This 16-item form draws on Dweck's Implicit Theories of Intelligence, Personality, and Character scales, pairing 8 fixed-mindset items with 8 growth-mindset items on a 6-point Likert scale; fixed items are reverse-scored and summed (range 16–96).

Possible archetypes

Fixed Fortress · Born-this-way energy
You came pre-installed and the receipt is missing. Lo sabemos.
At the Crossroads · Delulu-meets-real
Growth, in theory. Talent, in your case. We see the loophole.
Rising Learner · Failure-as-data
You treat every L as a tutorial. Annoyingly healthy of you.
Open Grower · Delulu-but-it-works
You believe you can become anything. Slightly soñador, fully working.

Related tests

Related reading

Sources & references

  • Dweck, C. S. (2006). Mindset: The New Psychology of Success. Random House.
By Ramon CurtoEditorial review TEST-YO! EditorialUpdated
FAQ + disclaimer
Is this a clinical assessment?

No. It's a short, self-reflection version of Dweck's Implicit Theories of Intelligence scale. It is not diagnostic.

Can mindset change?

Dweck's research shows that mindset can shift with experience, feedback framing, and deliberate practice.