Something I have learned through my role as a student (The Yet In Me - My Mindset Experience as a Student) and an educator in the education system is the word "yet" does not mean that I am on the cusp of a dramatic change or extreme growth in a short period of time but rather an opportunity to grow in almost a miniscule way in the moment, but those moments add up. I am still working on feedback though and my response to it. I accept all constructive feedback and prefer when people have suggestions or recommendations on how to proceed forward. Even prompting my thinking with questions helps. Typically though, others believe I am mad at them because I get upset, then the reality is I am upset with myself for not thinking of the ideas sooner.
This can be the same for our students. When a student has devoted a lot of time and energy from their perspective into solving a problem or completing a task, and then they get feedback on how to improve and adjust, their response is a reflection or deflection. When they reflect and understand intrinsically that it helps them learn and grow, the response comes out in a positive manner. When they deflect and the response comes out negatively, I am not sure it is because a student does not care, but they are building up a wall for some reason. Reflecting is uncomfortable. Realizing that we could have been better in the past "if only we had done this before" is humbling. Our response to the feedback and having a growth mindset in which to receive and accept it makes it less uncomfortable. The destination always seems to be the emphasis. The final grade, the diploma, the big promotion, all of these things are what we openly celebrate and praise. What if we focus more on the journey? Consider the space program and all of the failures that led up to the success. Neil Armstrong stepping onto the moon literally defined it as "one small step of a man" because that's actually all it was. The "one giant leap for mankind" encompasses all of the events that brought them to that moment. Through trial and error, through meticulous research and development, they learned when failures happened and how to adapt their understanding to build a rocket that takes people out of this world and onto the next. You could even consider Elon Musk and all that he is involved in with SpaceX. He can be viewed as genius or lunatic, but if we consider the great innovators of humanity, wouldn't we possibly classify them as either of those labels? They are ones who decided to ignore people limiting them and just try new things to see what happens. When the failure struck, the negative criticism did not stop them but rather encouraged them to try something else. We should consider the impact The Yet Mindset has as one small step for a student, one giant leap for education and the world. Let's get out of the world we are in and look towards the future.
References
NASA Video. (2013). One Small Step, One Giant Leap. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xSdHina-fTk
0 Comments
Your comment will be posted after it is approved.
Leave a Reply. |
My husband lovingly teases me when I reflect on my day with him and say "I learned something new today!" because he would be surprised if I didn't learn something new.
This blog is a collection of the new things I learn along the way. Categories
All
Archives
May 2024
|