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Teacher Resources

Page history last edited by wwl1 10 years, 4 months ago

 

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Are You Praising People the Correct Way?

How do you praise people? When your child achieves a good mark on a test or assignment, do you say to them "you must be really smart at this", or do you say "you must have worked really hard "?
In a 10-year study, psychologist Carol Dweck and her team at Columbia studied the effect of praise on students. She found that those children who were praised for their hard work did better in subsequent work, they were happier, and worked harder than those who were praised for being smart. Apparently, when acknowledging good effort students associate the achievement with the work, not their smarts, so they will continue to work well.
If you praise the student for being smart then when they fail they feel that their failure was evidence that they weren't really smart at all. This increases stress levels and they won't be as eager to tackle a challenge. If you praise the student for their effort, then when they fail, they assume that they just need to work harder to succeed.
Those people who have had to work hard all their lives and their efforts have been recognized are those who have developed good work habits, are happier and aren't frightened of failure. This will take them much further than someone who is smart and doesn't put in a good effort. Congratulate someone on the hard work: not their brilliance. Let their brilliance shine through their work!

 

Carol Dweck's Mindset Research:

 

1. Presentation that explains the difference between fixed and growth mindset

 

http://cbpen.files.wordpress.com/2010/02/page-presentation-mr-lb.pdf

 

2. How Not To Talk To Your Kids – the Inverse Power of Praise

http://nymag.com/news/features/27840/

 

3. The Praise A Child Should Never Hear

 

http://blogs.wsj.com/informedreader/2007/02/13/the-praise-a-child-should-never-hear/

 

 

 

 

Finding a Balance - Classroom/SOAR Program   

Student Concerns/Teacher Questions

 

Teacher Toolkit

Differentiation Strategies for Gifted Learners  

 

Curriculum Connections

Grade 4 Resources

Grade 5 Resources

Grade 6 Resources

Grade 7 Resources

Grade 8 Resources  

 

Math Enrichment

- a compilation of math contests, web sites and alternative menus

 

High School Out of Board Enrichment Opportunities

 

 

Enrichment Lending Library

 

 

 

 Websites:

 

 

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