Tonight when I got home from work my sons asked me if we
could head down to our neighborhood park and ride bikes. Knowing it was one of
the last free afternoons before school got started for them and me, I naturally
said yes and we headed out. Now this particular park is a playground with a
baseball field surrounded by a paved path. However, on one side the path take a
sharp curve on an access road and it slightly downhill and gravel. As my boys
were flying down the path and heading toward this particular spot I saw my
older son take the turn too quickly and take a spill. My younger son watched this and slowed down
and stopped before hitting this curve.
My older son got up, showed me his scratches and continued
on riding. The next time around he slowed down and took the curve in control
and navigated the gravel with no troubles. However, my younger son apparently did
not learn from the hard earned lesson of his older brother and instead took the
turn fast and went down hard as well. He looked at me with tears in his eyes
expecting me to somehow fix what had happened. I simply looked him (after I
realized he was not seriously injured J
) and asked him what he learned. He told me the “gravel is slippery” and
proceeded to take the turn with caution for the remainder of the time we were
at the park.
I was intrigued by this experience from a parenting and
teaching perspective. After seeing his older brother fall, my younger son still
decided to take the turn quickly and fall. For some reason he felt he could
pull off what his brother had not. As a parent, my inclination was the yell out
and tell him to slow down but then would he have learned that hard-earned
lesson? Do we over protect our kids to the point they have no life experience beyond
a parent’s warnings to dictate their actions? I often think we walk a fine line
and really need to be mindful of safety but also of allowing natural
consequence to serve as teaching tools.
In schools we talk a lot about protecting kids from adverse
consequences and making sure they don’t fail. I just can’t help but think that
if we let kids fall in the gravel more they just might learn more than if we
simply tell them the gravel is slippery.
Obviously, gravel can be a metaphor for failing a test, being cut from a
sports team or being dumped by a girl/boyfriend. As the new school year draws
closer I plan on looking for more opportunity to stand near and allow kids to
fall down and help them make sense of it rather than making sure they never
fall.
Disclaimer – I don’t plan on allowing students to play with
weapons grade plutonium, electric fences, or rabid raccoons in an effort to
learn from failure/pain but simply those small failures we often try to protect
kids from in school.
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