Difference between revisions of "Goal setting"

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(Cascading goals)
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*[[Achievement orientation]]
 
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*[[Growth mindset]]
 
*[[Grit (personality trait)]]
 
*[[Grit (personality trait)]]

Latest revision as of 13:56, April 15, 2024

SMART goals are Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound.[1]

Goal setting is the process of taking active steps to achieve your desired outcome.[2]

SMART goals

The acronym SMART goals uses a the below set of criteria to ensure that goal objectives are clearly defined and also attainable within a certain time period.[3]

SMART goals are:

  • Specific
  • Measurable
  • Attainable
  • Relevant
  • Time-based

Setting smart goals articles

WOOP method of goal-setting

WOOP "(an acronym which stands for Wish, Outcome, Obstacle, and Plan) is an evidence-based intervention that helps introduce students to goal-setting while guiding them through an exploration of obstacles and barriers."[4]

Articles and videos:

Cascading goals

See also: Cascading goals

"Cascading goals play a vital role in effective goal setting within organizations. This approach involves establishing overarching organizational objectives at the executive level, and then breaking them down into smaller, more specific goals for teams and individual employees."[5]

Performance goal

See also: Performance goal

A performance goal is a target level of performance expressed as a tangible, measurable objective, against which actual achievement can be compared, including a goal expressed as a quantitative standard, value, or rate. Performance goals should be provided for short-term as well as for long-term assessment of program performance.

The term is most often used in business or economics, but can also be used in setting personal targets.

Social influence and achievement goals/orientation

See also: Social influence and Achievement orientation

The abstract for the 2024 journal article Achievement Goals: A Social Influence Cycle published in the journal Annual Review of Psychology indicates:

Achievement goals have been defined as the purpose of competence-relevant behavior. In this respect they connect one of the basic human needs, i.e., competence, to one of society's core values, i.e., achievement. We propose to look at achievement goals through the lens of social influence. We review both the influence that cultural, structural, and contextual factors have on achievement goal endorsement and the influence that endorsing achievement goals allows people to have within their social space. The review allows us to propose a circular model of the influence on and of achievement goals: The culture, social structures, and contexts that are typical of a certain society shape the specific environments in which individuals develop their achievement goals, which in turn has an influence on the expression and circulation of these achievement goals into society, in a social influence cycle.[6]

See also

Notes

  1. SMART Goals
  2. Goal-Setting
  3. SMART Goals
  4. Introduce Students to Goal-Setting with the WOOP Method
  5. Why Cascading Goals Are the Key to Successful Goal Setting
  6. [ Achievement Goals: A Social Influence Cycle by Fabrizio Butera, Benoît Dompnier, Céline Darnon, Annual Review of Psychology, 2024 Jan 18:75:527-554. doi: 10.1146/annurev-psych-013123-102139. Epub 2023 Sep 27