Last week I talked about developing independent learners by
instilling the joy and excitement of learning in each child. Once we get those children interested in
learning, we need to make sure that we provide them with the basic tools of
learning.
Most people recognize reading, writing and arithmetic as the
basic tools of learning; with those basics, we can learn just about
anything. But the tools I'm talking
about are even more basic than these. We
need to teach children how to be life-long learners.
One of the first tools we need to give children is
perseverance. My husband's favorite
quote, from his father, is "Nothing hard is ever easy." We want to make things as easy as we can for
children, but the reality is that some things will always be difficult. We need to teach them this, but also show
them that, through perseverance and hard work, they can accomplish whatever
they set out to do.
Allowing, and encouraging, the children to work with
partners or groups will help them to start developing those collaboration
skills that are so important in most American businesses these days. Most employers are looking for the complete package
employee--someone who not only has content knowledge and skills, but have
emotional intelligence, social skills, and the ability to work
collaboratively.
Children are curious.
We have to encourage and nurture that curiosity by giving children a
safe environment in which to explore; not just physically safe, but emotionally
safe as well. They need to understand
that we all make mistakes, but those very mistakes are what help us to
learn. In modeling acceptance of
mistakes (and the ability to admit our own mistakes), we can also help those
children to develop empathy for one another.
In demonstrating an ability to "roll with the punches" when
things don't go as we planned, we can teach the children to do the same.
With these tools in their toolboxes (perseverance,
collaborative skills, emotional intelligence, social skills, curiosity, empathy,
flexibility, and the ability to accept mistakes), children are prepared to
tackle whatever comes their way and to start taking responsibility for their
own learning.
Misty
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