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July 11, 2018

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Protecting your kids from failure isn’t helpful. Here’s how to build their resilience instead.

File 20180703 116152 btdfq7.jpg?ixlib=rb 1.1

Failure is a gift disguised as a bad experience.
from www.shutterstock.com

Mandie Shean, Edith Cowan University

In recent years, there has been a concerted effort to protect children from failure in order to safeguard their fragile self-esteem. This seems logical – failure is unpleasant. It tends to make you look bad, you have negative feelings of disappointment and frustration, and you often have to start again.

While this is logical, it actually has the opposite effect. Children and adolescents in Australia appear less able to cope than ever before.

The problem is, in our efforts to protect children, we take valuable opportunities for learning away from them. Failure provides benefits that cannot be gained any other way. Failure is a gift disguised as a bad experience. Failure is not the absence of success, but the experience of failure on the way to success.



Read more:
What do parents fear? Unwrapping the bubble-wrap generation


The gift of coping

When we fail, we experience negative emotions such as disappointment or frustration. When children are protected from these feelings they can believe they are powerless and have no control over mastery.

The answer is not to avoid failure, but to learn how to cope with small failures.
These low-level challenges have been called “steeling events”. Protecting children from these events is more likely to increase their vulnerability than promote resilience. When adults remove failure so children do not have to experience it, they become more vulnerable to future experiences of failure.



Small failures can help your child become more resilient, if handled properly.
from www.shutterstock.com

The gift of understanding natural consequences

One of the greatest gifts failure brings is we learn natural consequences to our decisions. It’s a very simple concept developed by early behaviourists: “when I do X, Y happens”. If I don’t study, I will fail; if I don’t practice, I may lose my spot on the team.

Allowing children to experience these outcomes teaches them the power of their decisions.

When parents and teachers derail this process by protecting children from failure, they also stand in the way of natural consequences. Studies show children who are protected from failure are more depressed and less satisfied with life in adulthood.

The gift of learning

Mistakes are the essence of learning. As we have new experiences and develop competence, it’s inevitable we make mistakes. If failure is held as a sign of incompetence and something that should be avoided (rather than a normal thing), children will start to avoid the challenges necessary for learning.

Failure is only a gift if students see it as an opportunity rather than a threat. This depends on their mindset.

Children with a growth mindset believe intelligence is malleable and can be changed with effort. Those with a fixed mindset believe they were born with a certain level of intelligence. So, failure is a signal for growth mindset children to try harder or differently, but a sign they aren’t smart enough for children with a fixed mindset.

Praise should be focused on effort

Praise can be used to compensate and help children feel valuable in the face of failure. We see this when children get a participation ribbon in a running race for coming in last.

But research indicates, paradoxically, this inflated praise has the opposite effect. In the study, when parents gave inflated praise (“incredibly” good work) and person-focused praise (such as “you’re beautiful”, “you’re smart” or “you’re special”), children’s self-esteem decreased.



Read more:
Children learn from stress and failure: all the more reason you shouldn’t do their homework


Praise that is person-focused results in children avoiding failure and challenging tasks to maintain acceptance and self-worth. This is because praise is conditional on “who they are” rather than their efforts.

Praise for effort sounds like “you worked really hard”. This is better because children can control how hard they work, but they can’t control how smart or special they are. Children need to be free to learn without there being a risk to their sense of worth.

Tips for parents

So how do we do this well? Here are some tips to help parents support their children:



Author provided/The Conversation/Shutterstock, CC BY-ND


The ConversationProtecting your child from failure isn’t actually helpful. Allow them to feel and live it, and let them have the gifts failure brings. Experiencing failure will make them more resilient and more likely to succeed in the future.

Mandie Shean, Lecturer, School of Education, Edith Cowan University

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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  • If our children hurt themselves and it’s obvious they aren’t really hurt – sometimes they are more shocked than hurt – we tell them they’re Ok. Naturally if it is obvious they are really hurt we take immediate action. They have to learn right from wrong and know there will be consequences if they continue doing what hey shouldn’t. Young children I always explain why something is naughty and that they are not to do it. Toddlers may need to be reminded more than once but if they persist they have to learn also that they will be punished in some way. One of our methods is they have to sit quietly in an allocated area for a few minutes then we talk calmly to them and ask them to say sorry for………..(whatever they have done wrong). It seems to work. We can talk about it again late if they want to.

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  • So many rules for parenting. I think I praised my kids too much as they were growing up but that’s what I felt was right at the time.

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  • Really great reminder for me

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  • There are so many lessons to be learned from failure.


    • Sometimes you win and sometimes you lose and it really is about how you manage both.

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  • Great post and just so down to earth. Everyone fails a little as not all of us can be the business boss or owner.

    Reply

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