Ideally, one would be able to type in e.g. “growth mindset” or a link to Dweck’s original research, and see:
a statement of the idea e.g. ‘When “students believe their basic abilities, their intelligence, their talents, are just fixed traits”, they underperform students who “understand that their talents and abilities can be developed through effort, good teaching and persistence.” Carol Dweck initially studied this in 2012, measuring 5th graders on IQ tests.’
an opinion from someone reputable
any attempted replications, or meta-analyses that mention it
the Replication Markets predicted replication probability, if no replications have been attempted.
Given that social science research often doesn’t replicate, is there a good way to search a social science finding or paper and see if it’s valid?
Ideally, one would be able to type in e.g. “growth mindset” or a link to Dweck’s original research, and see:
a statement of the idea e.g. ‘When “students believe their basic abilities, their intelligence, their talents, are just fixed traits”, they underperform students who “understand that their talents and abilities can be developed through effort, good teaching and persistence.” Carol Dweck initially studied this in 2012, measuring 5th graders on IQ tests.’
an opinion from someone reputable
any attempted replications, or meta-analyses that mention it
the Replication Markets predicted replication probability, if no replications have been attempted.
Alas, the best I have usually been able to do is “<Name of the paper> replication” or “<Name of the author> replication”.