Encourage specific contributions and efforts

"You set the table without being asked — that helped the whole family" is more powerful than "Good job."

Why it works

Generic praise ("good job," "you’re so smart") delivers social approval that attaches the child’s self-worth to adult evaluation. Specific encouragement names the effort, contribution, or quality demonstrated — which attaches the good feeling to the child’s own action and the observable impact. This builds intrinsic motivation and belonging (I contributed to something larger than myself) rather than approval-seeking.

How to do it

  1. Describe what you observed specifically: "You noticed your sister was upset and you asked how she was doing."
  2. Name the contribution’s impact: "That made a real difference to her."
  3. Avoid evaluating ("you’re wonderful") — describe and let the child draw their own evaluation.

Evidence

Process praise research (Dweck, Mueller) shows that specific, effort-oriented praise predicts intrinsic motivation and persistence under difficulty better than ability or outcome praise — directly supporting the specific-contribution encouragement practice. (rct)

Dweck’s praise research has some replication challenges in larger samples; the direction of the finding (process over ability praise) is consistent, though effect sizes vary.

Sources

  • Mueller, C. M. & Dweck, C. S. (1998). Praise for intelligence can undermine children’s motivation and performance. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 75(1), 33–52.

Common mistake

Adding specificity as a qualifier to generic praise: "Great job — you really worked hard on that" still anchors on the evaluation ("great job") before the specific observation.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach helps you build a practice of specific encouragement by prompting you to identify a contribution you observed today and coaching the language for reflecting it back to your child.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).