I agree
with the ideas that Large has put forth. It is understandable that parents wish
to baby their children forever, but the world surely will not. The idea is to
nurture your children from the start just as any parent would then know when to
step back and let the child develop on their own. As the article states, “…if
you want success, build character and the rest will follow.” This would work in
K-12 schooling as I believe a lot of teachers try to incorporate a similar
idea, at least in my experience. No one is there to hold your hand, unless you
need it. I have had multiple classes throughout my K-12 career that consisted
of self-taught classes. The teacher was their teacher another class, but if I
needed the assistance I was free to ask for help. You have that comfort zone of
knowing the teacher is there, but at the same time you are, in a sense, totally
self reliant to effectively absorb the text. Students should not expect their
teachers to be there step by step through every problem. Rather, they should
build up our ability to be self-taught in early levels of schooling and slowly
let us develop the ability to learn on our own. Which… unfortunately, not a
whole lot of high school students could do. We all have the ability to learn,
some less than others, but I have noticed it is all about why you’re learning
that makes the difference. The article mentions Tough started his book with an
article about rats, that rats who were nurtured young stress to do better in
life. That is what I’m talking about. You need to understand the purpose of
learning. Not just the idea of, I’m at school so I have to. Disregard those
thoughts, you need to learn, whether
it is for your parents, your teachers, your dog or you. It doesn’t matter what
the purpose is, but the idea needs to be imprinted young that there is one.
With a purpose comes grit, which is
a reoccurring word and title of Tough’s article. Merriam-Webster defines grit
as, “firmness of mind or spirit: unyielding courage in the face of
hardship or danger.” Purpose brings forth that grit and courage.
Children who are babied until they become adults can never understand the
purpose of even the most mundane tasks. If our schools follow suit and wrap
their students in blankies and spoon feed their lessons every day then how will they grasp the purpose of
learning.
I like your stance on "not spoon feeding [their] lessons every day." I am a firm believer that students need to be held accountable for their part in the education process. As a teenager, I can tell you I was more absorbed in the social aspect of school. When my lessons involved socializing, I had a tendency to retain the information a lot easier then if I was left to my own accord. That being said, I never had a teacher, in high school, that held my hand therefore I was forced to be accountable for the knowledge I was expected to gain. By not having that entitlement or expectation of being handed the information, I held on to the information, which, in truth I hold closer to me now then the 'friends' I had, back in the day, that distracted me from my over all goal.. to learn.
ReplyDeleteGreat dialog going on here!
ReplyDeleteI feel this is one of the best Posts I've read of yours very well thought out and articulate. GREAT JOB! I have to agree with you and christa on the "not spoon feeding" education to students. I've had teachers who hold your hand the whole way and teachers give you the tools then leave you responsible for education you make with them. Teacher A may have led to better grades but teacher B led to better education. Again great post!
ReplyDelete*and teachers WHO give you the
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