“…Consistent with the widely accepted view that “test validity depends upon the population” (Markus & Borsboom, , p. 255), researchers engage with a variety of samples in a variety of contexts in order “to establish grit as a domain‐general trait” (Eskreis‐Winkler, Duckworth, Shulman, & Beal, , p. 11). For instance, study populations include U.S. Army cadets (Maddi, Matthews, Kelly, Villareal, & White, ), Chicago public school seniors (Eskreis‐Winkler et al, ), law school graduates (Zimmerman & Brogan, ), undergraduates at an elite university (Duckworth et al, ), black male students at a predominantly white university (Strayhorn, ), Turkish students (Arslan, Akin, & Çîtemel, ), spelling bee contestants (Duckworth, Kirby, Tsukayama, Berstein, & Ericsson, ), working adults in Japan (Suzuki et al, ), Filipino adults (Datu, Valdez, & King, ), and a general population of adults recruited through internet surveys (Eskreis‐Winkler et al, ). However, the breadth of populations and contexts used to validate the grit scale creates an appearance of validity that is superficial because grit researchers consistently ignore the complex linguistic and contextual meaning‐making mechanisms of human interactions.…”