I experienced something new last week. I have
always encouraged my students to take risks. If you fail, learn from it, move on, but make sure you take actions so you don't repeat the same mistakes. I've shown my students Famous Failures video, shared Famous Failures posters on my portal page, and always aimed to create a growth mindset
culture in my classroom.
But then, last week, I experienced something
new! I am currently studying advanced research methods at university. I have
always believed that if I work hard, put in the effort, I will learn and
achieve. But this was different. I felt completely isolated. Completely lost. Out of my learning zone. I've seen this visual, I've shared this visual but until last week, I had never connected with the visual.
My learning history-
- I finished school in Year 10,
- Attended university at 30.
- Awarded Dean's academic prize.
- Completed Masters in education (focus on primary mathematics)
- Completed Graduate certificate in gifted ed (COGE).
I sought help from everyone. I wasn't
afraid to ask for assistance, but very few people knew about multiple
regression. All those feelings in the panic zone were felt. While the marks aren't worth much, there was that part of me that wanted to learn, to understand, and to not be
defeated.
Then I thought about the students. Is this how
some feel? I recently read Lucy Clark's, 'Beautiful Failures' and now I have a better understanding. I have taught students with high anxiety in maths. As a teacher, I always
wanted to create a classroom that promoted a love for maths. Songs, books,
games, technology, anything and everything to change the students attitudes
toward maths. Change their attitude and self-perception, and their ability may follow. How many of
you have heard a student say, "I'm no good at maths"?
So now, I understand. I get it. This experience generated a rich conversation with my adult
children. We discussed the pressure, the expectations, developing resilience, and the teachers, and how they influence the student's self-efficacy. I can't imagine
having those feelings day after day, year after year. It's not sympathy
but empathy that I have for the students who don't see themselves as more than
a grade.
@stringer_andrea
Thanks for this post, Andrea. Its so insightful. We often glibly gloss over this feeling: FAIL first attempt in learning, but as you show well in this post, it depends on the frequency of failure, the level of challenge, so many things. The Panic Zone is an awful place to be. We need to be so mindful of this. Wonderful post.
ReplyDeleteThanks Andrea...I had similar excellence when doing a curse for my masters ...but didn't mage the connection to my students...Thank you for the insight.
ReplyDelete