This blog post suggests teachers emphasize effort in the classroom by avoiding the over simplification of historic and scientific achievements by including stories about struggle and success. It also suggests showing the relationship between effort and results, and separating "strategy from individual worth."
Several studies suggest a strong correlation between effort (or perseverance or grit or will power) and achievement — not just academic success but improved life quality beyond graduation day.
If this aspect of “character” is so vital, how can we give it more intentional emphasis in education?
1. Make stories about struggle and eventual success centerpieces of class discussions.A strong example trumps a “what if” scenario every time. Rather than posing a question to students, ”What if you tried to solve this problem and failed on your first try?” sprinkle tales of struggle and eventual success throughout the day. If you teach science, share stories of scientists who worked for months or years before discovering a breakthrough. If you teach history, avoid oversimplification and emphasize the struggles behind historical successes (e.g., Edison didn’t instantly “invent the light bulb”; he worked for years to improve existing designs, trying “a thousand” possibilities before finding the right combination of materials). If you teach math, share stories of mathematicians who wrestled with equations before finding a new formula. If you coach baseball, make sure students know that Babe Ruth struck out more than 1300 times on his way to hitting more than 700 home-runs. When you read to students, select stories featuring protagonists who overcome multiple challenges to achieve a goal.Regularly and intentionally weave stories like these into your conversations with students. They are more than inspirational; they are instructive reference points.
2. Direct attention to effort-result relationships. Carol Dweck’s well-known research found that teachers whose comments emphasized effort-result relationships had students learning up to 50% more than students of teachers who did not direct attention to effort-result relationships. A teacher emphasizing effort-result relationships may say, “Wow, you worked hard on this and look at the results!”rather than saying, “Wow, you are really good at math!” This subtle difference possesses power because it conveys a) that students can get better (or“smarter”) at something through effort, and b) that effort, not IQ or gender or socioeconomic status, etc., is what empowers learning and success.
3. Separate strategy from individual worth. It amazes me how many adults who accomplish something significant reveal in interviews that a teacher in their past questioned their abilities to be successful, often at anything, but frequently in the field where these individuals find success. (The latest example was one of this year’s winners of the Nobel Prize in medicine.) Dr. Robert Brooks suggests that classrooms should be places that welcome failure as a gateway to learning. One way we can do this is through our response to students’ errors.Rather than saying unhelpful things like “Try harder” or “Put your thinking capon,” we can redirect students’ focus and effort. Brooks’ example: “This strategy you’re using doesn’t seem to be working. Let’s figure out why and how we can change the strategy so that you are successful.” A response like this a)directs attention to the strategy rather than the student (i.e., fixing the strategy rather than the student), b) makes the teacher a partner in analyzing the error and in determining how to change the strategy, and c) communicates the teacher’s belief that the student can be successful. Such a response invites additional effort rather than withdrawal based on frustration or feelings of incompetence.
When we experience failure, our brains are in a state in which neuronal connections can be rewired, but only if we attend to our errors. When students resist analyzing mistakes and figuring out better strategies, they slam shut a window of optimal learning opportunity. The way we respond to student error can invite the opening of this window. In contrast, a less effective response can eliminate any space between pane and sill.
Continue Reading:
http://www.howtolearn.com/.../how-effort-empowers-learning/
Kevin D. Washburn is the executive director of Clerestory Learning, author of instructional-design model Architecture of Learning and instructional-writing program Writer’s Stylus, and co-author of an instructional-reading program used by schools nationwide. He is the author of “The Architecture of Learning: Designing Instruction for the Learning Brain” and is a member of the International Mind,Brain and Education Society and the Learning & the Brain Society. Washburn has taught in classrooms from third grade through graduate school.
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