Does one survive without the other? Can you be a risk taker
if you don’t have a certain amount of resilience? Can you be resilient, without
taking a few risks along the way? As a Teacher, both are things that we aim to
foster in our student’s education. However, this week I have questioned my own resilience
after things didn’t pan out the way I hoped. But it had me thinking about the
value of these lessons and how I should be embracing this to improve my
practice for the benefit of my students.
I work in a school that supports Design Thinking as a way of
Teaching and Learning. It is something I utilise a lot as a Design Teacher and
one aspect of Design Thinking is risk taking. Like any area that involves
creativity, there has to be a certain amount of risk taking to arrive at
credible solutions. Some of the greatest achievements of all time have been
largely due to the fact that the creator was prepared to take a certain amount
of risk. However, before those achievements come to fruition, there must be a
certain amount of failure along the way. Why is this failure so important?
Because it develops resilience.
I can’t get enough of Brene Brown at the moment and am
reading, watching and listening to as much of her teachings as possible. I was
listening to an audio recording where she was talking about resilience and
defined it simply as your ‘bounce back’ factor. I loved that because of its
simplicity. Brene is not a classroom Teacher, but this message among many others,
had me thinking of how I embrace resilience AND risk taking in my classes.
Explaining risk taking and the benefits of it are one thing,
but like everything we teach we have to have different ways to approach it. I’m
lucky with teaching design that it naturally embraces risk taking and there are
lots of opportunities for this. I have the time in my classes and in my
curriculum to not only promote but provide opportunity for this. Providing
these opportunities is important so kids can experience mistakes or failing and
learn not to be scared of trying something different.
I often share with my classes when individuals take risks
and fail and the learning that stems from that. However, writing this blog has
me wondering if discussing this ‘risk taking’ in class and the learning from it
is enough. If I really want to develop this type of culture, should I be
celebrating these risks more? Each week I award a Super Star of the week.
Should I award a Risk Taker of the week and promote that with similar posters
in my class? Likewise should I be awarding perseverance of the week or
Resilience of the week?
Something I believe in greatly as a Teacher is being
prepared to do the same as anything I ask of my students. I guess this is
referred to as modelling my Teaching or Practicing what I preach! This week I
did just that when I was asked to take a dance class. Anyone who knows me is
already laughing. Those who don’t, believe me you should be. I can’t dance to
save myself. However, when I had year 3 and 4 students standing in front of me
I had to embrace it and if I can be honest, I had a great time! I would never
have imagined that! So much so that I am in talks with the dance teacher about
developing a dance group for boys.
This week, I plan on tying my ‘dance teaching’ experience
into as many lessons as possible. Sharing my risk taking, what I learnt about
my ability and what I learnt about my resilience. I even plan on showing my new
dancing skills to encourage others to take a risk.
Resilience and risk taking. One doesn’t survive without
the other! For the students we teach, it’s imperative that we develop a culture
of risk taking to build resilience in them. We have to consistently model what
that looks like for our students and we have to be prepared to fail, learn from
it and share that with our students. We have to provide opportunity for risk
taking in our classrooms and celebrate the attempts and the learning from it. In
hindsight, my plans not working out last week weren’t so bad after all. In fact
it has been a good learning experience for me and one that I hope will further
benefit my practice and ultimately my students learning.
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