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May 18, 2009May 18, 2009  0 comments  Learning to Learn

An interesting quote I heard while speaking to a friend the other day. We were talking about learning, and what he felt was the most important parts of his personal learning process.

Focus. Yaz says that the greatest skill is knowing how to block unnecessary information. This is where the seemingly paradoxical quote “knowledge is the loss of information” comes from. With the huge amount of information available to us every day, how do we filter out the valuable stuff? All information has its value when it is needed, otherwise it is just a distraction.

Motivation. Yaz has to know why he is doing something. Then when he hits a problem or gets stuck, he can easily jump up and keep coming back to it. He knows why this is important to him, and can justify it. This is how he can spend 12 hours a day learning new material.

Tags: Learnings 

August 25, 2009August 25, 2009  0 comments  Learning to Learn

How we give praise to children can have a significant effect on their beliefs about learning, their resilience and their test scores.

Carol Dweck has done a lot of research in this field, and published a series of studies in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 1998, Vol. 75, No. 1, 33-52.

128 children (10-12 years old) were given a set of moderately difficult puzzles and were then told they had done very well. A third were praised for their effort (”you must have worked really hard”), a third for their ability (”you must be smart at this”) and a third were given no additional feedback.

The children were then asked if they wanted to take a harder or easier test (performance or learning goal). 67% of children who had been praised for ability chose the easier test. 92% of those who had been praised for effort chose the harder test.

A harder test was given to all children to examine how they responded to failure. Those praised for effort enjoyed the harder task and wanted to persist in the test more than those praised for ability.

Finally all the children took a test equal in difficulty to the first test. Children receiving ability feedback solved 0.92 fewer problems than they did on the first test. Children praised for effort solved 1.21 more.

By being aware of our communication in the classroom, we can encourage children to choose learning goals over performance goals. We can help them to persist longer and to enjoy overcoming challenges. And we can increase their performance in tests.

How can we get these results into our schools? I offer 2 ways:

  • a INSET workshop in mindset, read more here.
  • one on one coaching with teachers.
Tags: Learnings Learnings 

March 24, 2010March 24, 2010  0 comments  Learning to Learn

The learning through games session went very well.

Participants enjoyed themselves and gave some good feedback on what they had learnt in the session as well as ways to improve it in the future.

Some of the games invented in the session are going on to be used in the participants own work - what a great result!

And here is an interesting artifact from the event. Everyone had 9 stickers to distribute as they thought fit. The results show what people thought were important values for learning or for playing games. It suggests that challenge, fun and engagement are key areas to address when creating games for learning.
learning vs gaming

I've also added another resource for this session.


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matthewvenn
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