Whenever you're hesitating about something, I would recommend you do it and learn from it, because there is no better
teacher than mistakes; you learn to be more creative in problem solving, and when you're young you're given more lee - way to fail.
Here is what mistake - driven learning is all about: There ain't no better
teacher than a mistake... as long as it leads to a lesson learned.
Not exact matches
You can ask high school
teachers or youth workers about this if you like, but you really need look no further
than your own teen years, when your interests and attention seemed to spiral out in a million directions that could be
mistaken for having no direction at all.
We argue with the
teacher about our kids» less
than perfect grades in middle and high school, as if the
teacher has made a
mistake instead of our perfect kid.
No
teacher is better
than life itself and it is always better to let your teenager learn from his own
mistakes.
Guest bloggers Hunter Maats and Katie O'Brien,
teachers and authors, discuss the value of making
mistakes and helping students adopt the mindset to view their
mistakes as healthy challenges rather
than crushing defeats.
As he receives his paper, his
teacher begins to criticize him for his
mistakes saying, «You should have known better
than to write your thesis that way.»
The result, Crehan maintains, is that these future math
teachers have more opportunities
than other
teacher - candidates in Canada to «learn to analyze student
mistakes and deconstruct each mathematical concept.»
Above all, proofread carefully — recruiters are much less forgiving of grammar and spelling
mistakes than most grade school
teachers.