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📘 '''''{{Tooltip|Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance}}''''' is a nonfiction book by psychologist {{Tooltip|Angela Duckworth}} that blends research and reportage to argue that sustained passion and effort—“grit”—drive long-term achievement. Duckworth defines grit in the scholarly literature as “perseverance and passion for long-term goals,” drawing on studies of West Point cadets, National Spelling Bee contestants, and other cohorts. The book introduces an “effort counts twice” equation (talent × effort = skill; skill × effort = achievement) and organizes practical guidance around interest, deliberate practice, purpose, and hope. <ref name="PW2016Review">{{cite news |title=Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance |url=https://www.publishersweekly.com/9781501111105 |work=Publishers Weekly |date=21 March 2016 |access-date=3 November 2025}}</ref> Written in an accessible, reportorial style that mixes case studies with psychology, the prose aims to explain findings and offer usable advice. <ref name="Kirkus2016">{{cite web |title=GRIT |url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/angela-duckworth/grit-power/ |website=Kirkus Reviews |date=7 March 2016 |access-date=3 November 2025}}</ref> The hardcover is structured in three parts—what grit is and why it matters; growing grit from the inside out; and growing grit from the outside in—with a concluding chapter. <ref name="MarmotToC2016">{{cite web |title=Grit: the power of passion and perseverance — Table of contents |url=https://cmc.marmot.org/Record/.b58658488 |website=Colorado Mountain College (Marmot Library Network) |access-date=3 November 2025}}</ref> On release in May 2016 it was billed by the publisher as an “instant {{Tooltip|New York Times}} bestseller” and debuted at #2 on ''{{Tooltip|Publishers
== Chapter summary ==
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=== I – What Grit Is and Why It Matters ===
🚪 '''1 – Showing Up.''' At the {{Tooltip|U.S. Military Academy at West Point}}, newcomers face
🌟 '''2 – Distracted by Talent.''' At twenty-seven, a former management consultant trades a midtown glass tower for a seventh-grade math classroom on {{Tooltip|Manhattan’s Lower East Side}}. “Quick studies” who saw patterns at once did not necessarily earn top marks; steadier classmates who asked questions, took notes, and came for extra help rose fastest. A move to San Francisco’s selective {{Tooltip|Lowell High School}} revealed the same pattern: many teens studied for hours a day, and a quiet striver, {{Tooltip|David Luong}}, advanced into the accelerated track. After early setbacks—including a low test grade—he sought help, persisted, earned a 5 on {{Tooltip|AP Calculus}}, and ultimately built an engineering career. In 1869, {{Tooltip|Francis Galton}} framed achievement as a blend of ability, “zeal,” and “capacity for hard labor,” and {{Tooltip|Charles Darwin}} emphasized zeal and hard work over intellect in a well-known letter. Experiments on
🔁 '''3 – Effort Counts Twice.''' In 1940 at {{Tooltip|Harvard}}, 130 sophomores ran a steep, fast treadmill test capped at five minutes; the average lasted about four minutes, and some stepped off after ninety seconds. Decades later, psychiatrist {{Tooltip|George
🧪 '''4 – How Gritty Are You?.''' At West Point, incoming cadets complete psychological questionnaires during the first days of Beast Barracks, alongside physical and academic assessments; among them is the self-report {{Tooltip|Grit Scale}}. Built and later refined into the eight-item {{Tooltip|Grit-S}}, the inventory asks people to rate statements such as “Setbacks don’t discourage me” and “New ideas and projects sometimes distract me from previous ones” on a five-point scale, with half the items reverse-scored so the averaged result falls between 1.0 and 5.0. Across cadet cohorts, grit predicts who finishes Beast even after accounting for the {{Tooltip|Whole Candidate Score}}, which bundles test scores, class rank, leadership ratings, and fitness measures. In another validation, {{Tooltip|Scripps National Spelling Bee}} finalists with higher grit report more hours of deliberate practice and tend to advance further in competition. The scale distinguishes perseverance of effort from consistency of interests, and many respondents discover their effort scores outpace their consistency, a practical clue to where progress stalls. A simple, well-tested measure can reveal behavioral patterns—sticking with things and staying in love with them—that aptitude tests miss. By translating passion and perseverance into a number tied to real outcomes, grit shifts attention from flashes of promise to sustained follow-through.
🌱 '''5 – Grit Grows.''' Large cross-sectional surveys using the {{Tooltip|Grit Scale}} show a modest, reliable pattern: older adults tend to score higher than younger adults, even when education is held constant. Two explanations fit the data: historical context may shape cohorts differently, and individuals may mature toward greater perseverance as they accumulate experience and responsibility. Personality science calls this the “maturity principle,” and snapshots across ages cannot, by themselves, prove change within a person. Interviews with high achievers—from athletes to artists—trace a common arc: years of exploration, then narrowing commitments, then decades of steady pursuit through setbacks. Field studies at West Point and the National Spelling Bee reinforce that people who keep returning after early failures are the ones who stay the course. Aligning daily tasks to a small set of higher-order goals helps effort compound instead of scatter. In practice, prune distractions, schedule practice, and let time do its quiet work. Grit strengthens when environments reward long-horizon choices and when habits make it easier to come back the next day. As meaning deepens and small wins accrue, persistence stabilizes interest, making return engagements more natural.
=== II – Growing Grit from the Inside Out ===
🔍 '''6 – Interest.''' {{Tooltip|Benjamin
🛠️ '''7 – Practice.''' At the {{Tooltip|Scripps National Spelling Bee}} in 2006, 190 finalists were followed in a Penn study showing that competitors who spent more time in deliberate practice—solitary study and memorization—advanced further than peers who favored quizzing or leisure reading. Deliberate practice was rated the least enjoyable activity yet proved the strongest predictor of performance, and veterans gradually chose it more as they gained experience. Grit also tracked who accumulated more of this demanding work, and deliberate practice statistically explained how grit translated into better results. The method follows {{Tooltip|K. Anders
🎯 '''8 – Purpose.''' At a public university’s fundraising call center, a five-minute face-to-face with a scholarship recipient led callers, one month later, to spend about 142% more time on the phones and raise 171% more money; reading a letter alone did not move the needle. Making the beneficiary visible turned a rote job into work that mattered, and the effect replicated across semesters with different cohorts. Here, purpose means the intention to contribute to the well-being of others, and gritty people tend to braid that motive with personal interest. {{Tooltip|Amy
🌅 '''9 – Hope.''' In late-1960s experiments, {{Tooltip|Martin Seligman}} and {{Tooltip|Steven Maier}} exposed dogs to inescapable shocks; the next day many failed to jump a low barrier to safety even when escape was easy, a pattern they termed learned helplessness. Dogs that had previously controlled the shocks leapt the barrier quickly, showing that uncontrollability—not pain itself—erodes initiative. Hope here is the expectation that one’s efforts can improve the future, which makes trying again the default. Seligman’s later work operationalized this stance with the {{Tooltip|ABC
=== III – Growing Grit from the Outside In ===
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👨👩👧 '''10 – Parenting for Grit.''' At home with Amanda and Lucy, a family ritual called the Hard Thing Rule sets expectations that everyone—including the adults—pursues a demanding activity that requires daily deliberate practice, that each person chooses their own pursuit, and that quitting is allowed only at a natural stopping point like the end of a season or a paid term. As the girls approach high school, the rule tightens: they must commit to one activity for at least two years so that interest and effort have time to compound. The household cycled through ballet, gymnastics, track, handicrafts, and piano before settling into viola, joining school and city orchestras, and noticing motivation grow as skill improved. Beyond one family, developmental research on parenting styles shows that children do best when adults are both demanding and supportive; a simple two-axis grid distinguishes authoritarian (high demand, low support), permissive (low demand, high support), neglectful (low both), and what Duckworth calls wise parenting (high both). Wise parents model follow-through, set clear expectations, and offer warmth and practical help, so children experience both accountability and belonging while they practice. Coaches and teachers can play the same role, bringing the same combination of standards and support to the gym, studio, or classroom. Autonomy over “your” hard thing preserves intrinsic motivation, while firm commitments create friction against impulsive quitting, so practice sessions add up. Over time, this blend turns scattered effort into stable identity, which is why wise, high-expectation care reliably grows grit.
🏟️ '''11 – The Playing Fields of Grit.''' In a 1985 multi-campus study, {{Tooltip|Educational Testing Service}} researcher Warren W. Willingham tracked thousands of applicants and then 4,814 enrolled students across nine selective colleges, rating “productive follow-through” from extracurricular records; sustained, successful participation predicted college outcomes above grades and test scores. Building on that idea, Duckworth created a brief survey for high-school seniors that tallied multi-year commitment and advancement (awards or leadership) in up to two activities, then checked back two years later to see who was still in college. The pattern replicated: longer, deeper involvement—sticking with a sport, instrument, or club beyond a first year—went with persistence after high school. Youth sports and supervised arts programs serve as practical laboratories: a non-parent adult sets standards, practice is scheduled, feedback is immediate, and teams teach responsibility to others. Because rules, seasons, and competitions impose external structure, students learn to show up on hard days, not only on fun ones, and to keep effort consistent when progress slows. Parents can encourage sampling early on, then ask for at least one multi-year commitment in adolescence so skills and identity have time to mature. Follow-through in real settings is both a proxy for grit and a way to build it; the same behaviors that predict later persistence are the ones that train it. Seasons, scoreboards, and teammates externalize goals and deadlines, converting self-control into shared routines that make perseverance easier to repeat.
🏛️ '''12 – A Culture of Grit.''' After Seattle’s 2013 championship season, head coach Pete Carroll invited a close look at the
📘 '''Conclusion.''' The book closes with two avenues for growth: from the inside out—cultivating interests, scheduling deliberate practice, connecting work to a purpose beyond the self, and training an optimistic, agentic way of explaining setbacks—and from the outside in—surrounding yourself with parents, coaches, mentors, and teams that expect you to keep going. It recaps evidence that grit predicts persistence in challenging, meaningful contexts and reminds readers that it is not the whole of character; virtues like honesty and kindness matter for the kind of life worth building. Practical tools
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