Permission to fail
[cross-posted at Moving at the Speed of Creativity]
got high schools on my mind
.
A high school teacher told me recently that her school allows students to try
harder courses than they normally might take. For example, students might sign
up for an Honors English class instead of a regular English class or an AP
Government class instead of a normal Government class. These are big issues in
secondary schools: who gets to take advanced / Honors / AP courses, who gets to
be exposed to rigorous course content, and who doesn’t. At first I thought that
this was great, that here’s a school that’s trying to open up learning
opportunities for students. But then my back brain registered how she talked
about the school policy. She said that the school gives students
“permission to fail.” And that’s when it all fell
apart for me.
Permission to fail. What a horribly sad and
depressing term. Does a permission to fail policy
recognize that these kids might need a little extra support to be successful or
does it simply thrust them into the challenging learning environment and say,
“Good luck!”? Is a permission to fail policy premised
on student success or on a belief that “these kids really can’t do the work but
we’ll let them try because it looks and feels good” (to us, to parents, to the
public)? Perceptions and beliefs shape reality. Will a permission to
fail
policy ever result in large numbers of successful
students?
I left that school wishing it had a permission to
succeed
policy.