True Grit

10 tips for promoting strength, resilience, and perseverance among your students.

By Jennifer L. W. Fink
  • Instructor Magazine

Practice Makes Perfect: The Teacher Edition

Dancers rehearse. NFL players practice. But teachers? Not always so much.

That’s a mistake, says Erica Woolway. Like other performance professionals, teachers spend their days in front of an audience. Few, though, practice like dancers or sports stars, despite the fact that research shows practice to be an effective method of improving teaching performance.

Woolway and Doug Lemov, coauthors ofPractice Perfect, have spent hours analyzing videos of effective teachers in action. Those hours allowed them to pinpoint effective techniques, which they then taught to teachers in workshops. But follow-up, in-class observations revealed that the “techniques weren’t translating into the teachers’ instruction,” Woolway says. She and Lemov soon added practice time to their workshops—and found that teacher effectiveness improved.

Teachers should isolate key teaching skills—such as using a strong voice in the classroom—and practice those key skills over and over again. At least some professional development time should be  devoted to practice, Woolway says. Practicing even five minutes of your lesson plan in front of experienced colleagues may improve your classroom performance.

This past October, we attended the Education Nation Summit, hosted by NBC’s Brian Williams. The topic of one of the hottest panels: “grit.” Paul Tough, author of the best-selling How Children Succeed: Grit, Curiosity and the Hidden Power of Character, was joined by Stanford University professor Carol Dweck (Mindset) and the University of Pennsylvania’s Angela Duckworth. Real success, they argued, does not necessarily correlate with intellectual ability. It requires hard work, determination, and self-control—so-called noncognitive traits that enable students (or anyone) to reach their full potential.

The panel proved one of the most intriguing of the summit, and we wanted to learn more. We reached out to these experts, and others, to come up with 10 grit-building techniques to help you prepare your students for success—in the classroom and in life.

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Did anyone find the OET Draft on Grit (linked to the email of the 22nd) or this useful?

My school expanded our anti-bully program to include School Culture (how we do school, do our extra curricular activities, do sports, etc.). I read the overview of the draft and this article above.

Did anyone else? What were your impressions and take aways?

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