Understanding Failure
We associate the great Michael Jordan with winning and in fact we should. However, in order to succeed, he admits he needed to fail.
The question is, how often are we given an opportunity to fail? Better yet, how often do we allow ourselves to be vulnerable enough to fail and reflect in ways that allow us to refine what it is we do?
Failure is usually viewed with a negative connotation. In fact, we typically refer to our default filters and tend to let the failures consume us and hyper-focus on all that went wrong. The problem is that we care! We care what people think of us and we want their acceptance.
Think about it for a moment, you finally get the courage to try something new in your teaching; a new lesson, activity, grouping strategy, or implementing technology and it flops. We tend to dwell on the failure then, consult with our colleagues and let them know that we tried something new and it failed for a list of reasons. Rather than dwelling and making excuses for why the work didn't go as planned, reflect intentionally and adjust.
"Failure is only the opportunity to begin again more intelligently." - Henry Ford
This quote is particularly true in education. Teachers and students need opportunities for repeated practice in any learning environment. Therefore, it is extremely important that there is time for sensible reflections throughout the learning process followed by the adjustment to "begin again more intelligently." True learning will occur when there is a sense of the current reality in the learning environment and the desire to improve that reality. If we can begin to establish a tolerance for failure in our teaching and learning, we will naturally seek out better practices and methods that enhance our current work.
Perspective and Reflection
Look at the failures with a new perspective. Acknowledge the failure and understand that failing is part of the learning process. Rather than dwelling on how horrible things went in the learning experience, think about how to frame the learning with a more positive lens by establishing ways to change the current situation.
Lately, I've thought about my interactions with teachers and I've recognized some failed experiences. I've been able to examine those missed opportunities with a positive lens by thinking about just what was learned during that time. I tried to think of it from the teacher's perspective by asking, "what are some takeaways you have from this experience?" Next, I think and ask, "if we were to have another shot at this work, what would you do differently?" These questions not only force me to be a good listener, but they also provide insight into the teacher's perspective of what was learned and provide the foundation for reflection.
Once you've acknowledged the failed experience, reflect with your new perspective and consider the following questions:
- What were the strengths or bright-spots within the experience?
- What is your role in the failure?
- What have you learned about yourself? Students? Learning?
- What evidence are you examining to make the determination that it was indeed a failed experience?
Goal Setting
Now that you've examined the learning experience with a new perspective and you've accepted and reflected on your role and the outcomes, it's time to set new goals for the next learning experience. When thinking about these goals, it's important to make them specific and measurable. Additionally, these goals should be relevant to the people who set them.
- Select your goal (what change do you want to see?)
- Identify "why" (what evidence do you currently have for this goal?)
- Create steps (professional reading, tech integration, partner with a colleague, work with a coach etc.)
- Reflect on student/teacher outcomes throughout the process (review assessments, examine engagement, research student behaviors etc.)
- Set a new goal for a "personal best"
This is such a great topic to start with. It is crucial that students understand this in order to move them forward. I love that commercial for the powerful message it gives.
ReplyDeleteGreat insight! Many of these tools can transfer to situations outside of education as well. We are never too old to learn!
ReplyDeleteas mentioned, another thought, no really a question. are the students also afforded this thought process that failing is part of the learning process? we teach our children "practice makes perfect" yet i think students still feel that pressure to "get it right" straight out of the gate. they don't want to hold the class back, don't want to feel stupid in front of my friends, etc. thoughts?
ReplyDelete