As a parent and a teacher I often reflect on how these two
roles intersect and are greatly influenced by each other. Lately I have been
thinking a great deal about failure and how we “use” it in school as well as
outside of school. I worry we might be, for lack of a better term, screwing up
a generation of kids due to the way we are using and not using failure as a
learning tool.
For starters, have we become overly obsessed with making
kids feel good about themselves and in doing so reducing our conversations to
dishonest and artificial? For example, when we give every kid a trophy or a
ribbon just for trying, are we watering down accomplishments and celebrating
kids’ inadequacies? While that may sound harsh, should we artificially be
building kids up and telling them they are good at something they are not? In
doing so do we run the risk of kids never developing coping skills to deal with
failure or a situation where they are not the “best”? By falsely telling a kid
they are good at something or being shielding them from failure, are we helping
them in the long term?
Along those same lines, are we actually letting kids fail?
Is there an environment in our houses and schools where kids can experience
failure? This does not have to be soul crushing or life altering failure, but
they need to fail at things. When a kid produces a poorly written piece of
writing do we give them an “F” is that is deserved or do we inflate it to
protect the student from the feeling of failure? If we are watching our kids learning to ride
their bikes do we run in and hold the seat before giving them a chance to fall
and get back up? If a kid fails, let them fail. Stand right next to them and
help move on but don’t shield them from the failure, they need it.
Another aspect of failure is the notion of celebrating
failure, which has become rather popular among teachers and parents alike.
However, I disagree with this idea to a point. If my kids fail at something, I
don’t celebrate it nor do I encourage them to fail. Celebrating failure is
telling kids failure is something to aspire to and places value on something we
shouldn’t value. Instead the focus should be on getting back up and trying
again. When our kids fall when we are teaching them to ride that bike, do we
celebrate the skinned knees and bruises? No, we pat them on the back and
encourage them to get back on that bike and keep trying. We celebrate their
ability to stick with it and finally succeed. Shifting the focus off the
failure and on to the “what now” is the key to making sure our students and
children have the skill set to face adversity and keep going.
When kids do fail it is ok for them to feel bad about it.
Failing should not be a positive experience and for those who have failed, they
know this to be true. I cannot think of a time in my life where I failed and
felt good about it. I hated it and it fueled to me to get better and avoid that
feeling. Kids need to feel that if they are to understand how to grow and learn
from those mistakes and overcome obstacles. Constantly protecting them from
those negative feelings will create a false sense of confidence which will
likely not serve them well in the long run.
If we are going to use failure in schools or in our homes,
we need to make sure we are doing it effectively. Simply shielding kids from
failure or giving them cake and ribbons when they do fail may not be the best
approach. Let’s create environments where kids are safe to take risks with the
potential for failure. Let them experience failure and not enjoy it but help
them use that feeling to get back up and move past it. It is only through
allowing kids to truly experience failure and let them learn from it that it
can truly have value.
No comments:
Post a Comment