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Do Non-Cognitive Variables Have Powerful Effects on Academic Achievement?

Jun 21, 2025
While intelligence plays a significant role in determining academic success, it isn't the sole factor. The relationship between IQ and educational outcomes—grades, test scores, and years of schooling—is imperfect, leaving room for other influences. As Gottfredson noted, intelligence's effects are probabilistic rather than deterministic, improving the likelihood of success but not guaranteeing it. Various psychological characteristics like motivation, creativity, and persistence, along with non-psychological factors such as socioeconomic background and parental engagement, also contribute to student achievement.

The debate centers not on whether non-cognitive factors matter, but on their magnitude compared to intelligence. Four primary candidates are frequently proposed as potentially more influential than cognitive ability: personality traits, motivation, growth mindset, and grit.



Personality Traits

The Big Five personality theory identifies five core traits: neuroticism, extraversion, openness, agreeableness, and conscientiousness. Research demonstrates that conscientiousness shows the strongest relationship with academic performance, with correlations typically ranging from r ≈ .20 to .35. However, this remains weaker than intelligence-achievement correlations of r ≈ .35 to .70. Conscientiousness matters because its characteristics—competence, organization, dutifulness, and self-discipline—mirror those of ideal students. Still, high conscientiousness cannot fully overcome significant intelligence disadvantages.



Motivation

Motivation represents another crucial non-cognitive influence. Highly motivated individuals establish and achieve more ambitious goals, and policies promoting student motivation yield improved dedication and performance. However, motivation must translate into learning-conducive behaviors to be effective. While motivation correlates positively with academic outcomes, controlling for intelligence sometimes eliminates this relationship. Research indicates that cognitive abilities remain the strongest predictor of school achievement, with motivation's influence, though important, being substantially smaller than intelligence.



Self-Efficacy and Mindset

Self-efficacy—the belief in one's capability to accomplish tasks successfully—positively correlates with educational outcomes. However, it operates domain-specifically, meaning success in one area doesn't automatically transfer to others.

Growth mindset theory, popularized by Carol Dweck, proposes that believing intelligence can improve through effort leads to better outcomes than viewing it as fixed. While 96% of American teachers have heard of growth mindset and most believe it's important, recent large-scale studies tell a different story. The average correlation between growth mindset and achievement is merely r = .10, and interventions produce effects of only d = .08—too small for practical significance. Multiple randomized controlled trials, including studies using Dweck's own materials, have shown zero or negligible impacts on academic performance. Even Dweck's best studies show effect sizes of only d = .03 to .10, far from the "profound" results claimed by proponents.



Grit

Grit, defined as perseverance and passion for long-term goals, correlates weakly with educational achievement (r ≈ .01 to .25). More problematically, grit correlates extremely highly with conscientiousness (r = .66 to .84), suggesting it's merely a rebranded version of an existing trait rather than a novel discovery.



Conclusion

While advocates of these various non-cognitive traits emphasize different mechanisms, they share a common theme: the importance of hard work. Intelligence alone cannot compensate for laziness, but neither can effort overcome substantial cognitive limitations. Schools grade students on their work, and success requires effort. The practical challenge for educators and parents is determining how to encourage sustained effort in students, recognizing that while hard work can modestly compensate for other limitations, intelligence remains the primary predictor of academic achievement.





From Chapter 20 of "In the Know: Debunking 35 Myths About Human Intelligence" by Dr. Russell Warne (2020)