Teaching resilience: Reflection
Posted by on March 10, 2014
Teaching resilience: Reflection
By Kevin D. Washburn
Student doing the notes “I’m so stupid. I’ll never get this!” The message looped inside Kent’s mind, its echoes blinding him to any way forward. When his teacher came by, she assumed he was daydreaming and not giving the practice exercises any effort. A reprimand followed, Kent looked back at the work in front of him, and the audio loop returned. “I’m stupid,” it reverberated. “I’ll never get this.”
In addition to imagination, fostering students’ reflection abilities helps them develop resilience. We can equip students to think their ways out of defeat and into healthy mind states where learning — deep learning, in fact — can happen.
Reflection
Reflection comprises the ability to monitor one’s own thinking — metacognition — and to engage strategies — self-direct — that make positive adjustments. It involves three phases.
http://smartblogs.com/education/2014/02/20/teaching-resilience-reflection/
[ed note: Reflection is a key element of high quality service-learning practice.]
More in "New Resources"
- Students Need Joy, Community and Fulfillment
- Philadelphia 2024: The State of the City
- New Digital Publication Offers Colleges and Universities Guidance on Managing “The Morning After”—the Days and Weeks Following Election Day
Stay Current in Philly's Higher Education and Nonprofit Sector
We compile a weekly email with local events, resources, national conferences, calls for proposals, grant, volunteer and job opportunities in the higher education and nonprofit sectors.