Wednesday, March 07, 2012
I Want My Kids to Fail
I’ve missed more than
9000 shots in my career. I’ve lost almost 300 games. 26 times, I’ve been
trusted to take the game winning shot and missed. I’ve failed over and
over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed. – Michael
Jordan
The pupil who is never required to do what he cannot do, never does what he can do. – John Stuart Mill
I want my kids to fail. That probably isn’t at the top of your list
for your kids, but it should be. Failure is one of the most important
experiences they will ever have. The road to success is paved with
failure because failure teaches us how to succeed.
I want my kids to fail. It is only when they fail that they have an
opportunity to pick themselves back up. It is only when they fail that
they learn to work hard. It is only when they fail that they learn what
doesn’t work. It is only when they fail that they learn that sometimes
people need help. It is only when they fail that they learn empathy
for others struggling. It is only when they fail that they learn that
life is not always fair. It is only when they fail that they understand
what being human is.
I want my kids to fail, but not to the point that they can’t
emotionally continue. Right now I am there to help provide a pep talk,
spend time working with them to succeed, and tell them that I believe
they can succeed if they continue to try. But I will not always be able
to be there, so this motivation needs to become internalized so that
they succeed even if no one else believes in them.
I want my kids to fail, but not to the point where they cannot afford
to feed, shelter, and clothe themselves. While they are under my care
is a time that the consequences of failure are not threatening to their
health and welfare. This is the time to learn through failure how to
succeed.
I want my kids to fail in the classroom. This is true education! I
don’t want them to believe that success is easy, but when a child is
bright enough to learn with minimal effort and is rewarded with A’s for
that, they come to believe that hard work isn’t needed for success. I
want them to struggle, to not always succeed on the first try – or the
twentieth, to learn that asking for help is not a sign of weakness or
lack of intelligence, and to see that success is often a long process.
I want my kids to fail. That is one reason we supplement their
education at home. Our kindergartner has learned through doing second
grade math, which she can find challenging, that there is a strong
correlation between the effort she puts in and how her quiz scores are.
When she has a rough quiz, she often chooses to do three or four
practices so that her next quiz will be better. This drive will take
her further than her natural intelligence.
I want my kids to fail – and you should want yours to also. If your
children are struggling, help them to learn to succeed. Don’t make
success easy for them, but teach them the skills they need to succeed.
If your children are not struggling at times in school, ask why not.
Ask for curriculum that challenges them and makes them work for their
grades. Learning how to fail is one of the most important skills they
will ever learn.
I want my kids to fail. It is how they will learn to succeed.
Rich
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