the wisdom of mistakes
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Learning from mistakesTRANSCRIPT
The Wisdom of Mistakes
If you want to succeed, embrace failure.
A year ago, I would have expected such paradoxical advice to come from a Taoist monk
or a Jedi master. Now, after a sabbatical year away from school, I find myself touting
that same refrain as I explore questions about teaching and learning. How do I
encourage the freshman boy who struggles on an early test? How do I help a rookie
softball shortstop maintain her confidence when her throw sails over the first
baseman’s head? How do I support the senior who’s worried about getting rejected by
her first-choice school?
Even though we at Northfield Mount Hermon see ourselves as an open-minded prep
school—not just getting kids to the “top” colleges, but to the schools and programs
that fit them best—we still employ many of the same measuring sticks that our peers
do. We want our kids to excel in academics, arts and athletics—nail all three, even
better. To the teenage mind, a single failure can sometimes feel ruinous. Lose one
game and you miss the playoffs. Get one B and you might get rejected at Princeton.
Such a high-pressure house of cards leaves little room for exploring uncertain ground
and crowds out the benefits of healthy risk-taking.
During my sabbatical explorations last year, I studied how to foster a more
courageous, creative, and connected classroom. More specifically, I explored how four
varied fields—contemplative practice, improvisational theater, positive reinforcement
behavioral training, and growth mindset work—could overlap in such an effort. Some
of my colleagues chuckled at the scope and complexity of the project—a year long
drink at the fire hydrant, eh?—but I sensed I’d find valuable insights.
My travels led me to create art in nature at an eco-spiritual community on the coast of
Scotland and sing Spontaneous Broadway on the improv stages of San Francisco. I
watched an NCAA champion softball coach lead practice in Florida and heard mythical
tales of powerful horses in Iceland. I learned about mindset in a conversation with a
psychology professor at Stanford and about compassion from some street vendors in
Venice, Italy. Everything I encountered, it seemed, invited me to shift my way of
thinking about failure.
For example, most contemplative traditions use a gentler approach to so-called
mistakes. When attention strays from a focus point—the breath, for example—there’s
no ridicule or shaming. One simply notices the straying and gets back to the focusing.
The lapse becomes a lesson.
When I struggled last summer to build a fragile trail of stones extending from a boulder
into a tidal pool, I remembered the words of nature artist Andy Goldsworthy in the
documentary Rivers and Tides as he laments a fallen stone sculpture:
“The moment when it collapses is intensely disappointing. This is the fourth time it’s
fallen, and each time I got to know the stone a little bit more, it got higher each time. It
grew in proportion to my understanding of the stone.”
He then pauses before adding:
“I obviously don’t understand it well enough yet.”
Again, no self-flagellation, only the recognition that he’s learning—and needs to learn
more.
The theater improvisors I met showed me how to rebound from muck-ups with a
practice known as the Failure Bow. Rather than compound a mistake by wincing from
expected punishment—external or internal—the actor defuses the failure by taking a
proud step forward and throwing both arms in the air to declare “I failed! Woo hoo!”
In other words, Yes, I messed up. And yes, I’m still here. I’m still growing. Such cheerful
resilience delights audiences and inspires stagemates. And the eagerness is infectious.
Correct hand position for a great swing: “click!”
Behavioral trainers and coaches who employ positive reinforcement methods—reward
movement toward the behavior you want and ignore the rest—don’t harp on failure
either. I can use a “tag,” a non-verbal audible marker like a snap or a click, to let a
softball player know when she’s got her wrists in proper position to make a great
swing, for example. The tag says “Yes.” If she doesn’t hear the sound, I don’t point out
the error or offer more instruction. I stay silent. There’s no dishonor or derision, only
the information the player needs. In the quiet, she then determines the necessary
adjustment and receives reinforcement from me the moment she finds the right
alignment. Her ‘failure’ provides feedback. It leads to the solution.
Someone with a fixed mindset believes that whatever abilities we have come set in
stone. No amount of effort can make up for a lack in talent and, in fact, effort
demonstrates a lack of talent. A growth mindset, in contrast, suggests greater fluidity
in intelligence and ability. Those who see their apparent failures as prototypes for
future success maintain the courage and resilience to keep going. They stoke their
flames for further learning—and ultimately reach farther than others who think
they’re fixed.
These attitudes toward failure may seem revolutionary in educational settings, where
we so often focus only on success, but tilling new soil often bears huge fruit. Errors in
the classroom—or on the playing field, or the stage, or wherever students are
absorbing new information—offer valuable information for incremental improvement
and sometimes bust open the window to previously unforeseeable innovation. In
failure, we can all find wisdom and opportunities for real learning. No Jedi master or
Taoist sage necessary.