Crumpled Reminder
Students write down a recent mistake and their feelings about it, and then crumple up the paper. Then they reflect on how their mistakes help them to learn.
Students write down a recent mistake and their feelings about it, and then crumple up the paper. Then they reflect on how their mistakes help them to learn.
Students will:
Lead a discussion using prompts from Classroom Discussion about Mistakes:
This practice is an activity from PERTS’ Mindset Kit, a free set of online lessons and practices that encourage adaptive beliefs about learning. PERTS (Project for Education Research that Scales) is a Stanford University-based lab that helps educators apply evidence-based strategies in order to advance educational excellence and equity on a large scale. See https://www.mindsetkit.org and https://www.PERTS.net.
Cultivating a growth mindset–one that embraces rather than fears mistakes–has been found by researchers to have a plethora of benefits. For example, a growth mindset can improve academic performance, increase well-being, boost social competence, reduce bias, and promote prosocial (kind, helpful) behavior.
Not wanting to make mistakes may be motivated by a fear of failure–a complicated human conundrum at best that is connected to our self-worth. For instance, studies have found that “overstrivers,” (i.e., students who tell everyone that they have very little time to prepare for an upcoming test and then spend the entire night studying) are afraid that failure will confirm their greatest fear—that they’re not perfect.
Thus, by helping students to see mistakes as opportunities for growth, teachers are placing more importance on students’ efforts rather than their “innate” ability–and putting students’ self-worth where it belongs: on the sole fact that they are imperfect but gloriously wonderful human beings.
Do you want to dive deeper into the science behind our GGIE practices? Enroll in one of our online courses for educators!
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