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A Jaunt to the Falls

12/31/2016

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The temperatures, this winter, have been reasonably mild, so the family and I took a quick drive to Grand Falls for a look-see. This is Missouri's largest continuously-flowing falls, and it's right here in Joplin's back yard.  If you get a chance, trek on over to the falls, and explore nearby Wildcat Glades during your time off.
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Grit:  Grit Grows

12/30/2016

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The first part of Angela Duckworth's Grit:  The Power of Passion and Perseverance is titled What Grit Is and Why It Matters.  In one of the more intesting chapters, Duckworth addresses the old nature-versus-nurture argument.
The nature-nurture question is a very basic one.  We have an intuitive sense that some things about us - like our height - are pretty much determined in the genetic lottery, while other things - like whether we speak English or French - are a result of our upbringing and experience.  "You can't train height" is a popular expression in basketball coaching, and many people who learn about grit want to know if it's more like height or more like language.
Like we might guess, there is not a cut-and-dry approach to answering the question.  I often call for balance in the theories that are presented in education and psychology.  In the same way, I would suggest that the answer to the nature-versus-nurture question is not one or the other, but a bit of both.

Duckworth explains that just as hundreds of genes determine height, the same is true of defining grit.  This is not a single gene.  The human body and psyche are complicated.  Of course, we might have figured all of that out on our own, just as we might have surmised that the following is true:
Likewise, we learn, as novelist John Irving did, that "to do anything really well, you have to overextend yourself," to appreciate that, "in doing something over and over again, something that was never natural becomes almost second nature," and finally, that the capacity to do work that diligently "doesn't come overnight."
But is that all that grit is?  Is it just a matter of repeating something over and over to the point that it becomes an overlearned, second nature, habit?  That's what I did in my high school typing class, but I wouldn't exactly say I was gritty about it.  No, there seems to be something more to defining grit than to say it is simply dedication to practice.  In fact, Duckworth says that practice is only one of four aspects of grit.
First comes interest.  Passion begins with intrinsically enjoying what you do...With enduring fascination and childlike curiosity, [gritty people] practically shout out, "I love what I do."

Next comes the capacity to practice.  One form of perseverance is the daily discipline of trying to do things better than we did yesterday.  So, after you've discovered and developed interest in a particular area, you must devote yourself to the sort of focused, full-hearted, challenge-exceeding-skill-practice that leads to mastery.  You must zero in on your weaknesses, and you must do so over and over again, for hours a day, week after month after year.  To be gritty is to resist complacency...

Third is purpose.  What ripens passion is the conviction that your work matters.  For most people interest without purpose is nearly impossible to sustain for a lifetime.  It is therefore imperative that you identify your work as both personally interesting and, and at the same time, integrally connected to the well-being of others...

And finally, hope.  Hope is a rising-to-the-occasion kind of perseverance...but hope does not define the last stage of grit.  It defines every stage.  From the very beginning to the very end.  it is inestimably important to learn to keep going even when things are difficult, even when we have doubts.  At various points, in big ways and small, we get knocked down.  If we stay down, grit loses.  It we get up, grit prevails.
I have to say, in sorting through all of the stories that the author tells and the interviews she conducts, I find this listing of the process to be easy to understand.  Coming from an educator's point of view, I can share that process with my students.  But as simple as the definition is, the process is definitely not as easy.  For example, how does a teacher get a student interested?  Is it a matter of students seeing the teacher's exuberance for a subject?  That has to be a part of it.

If I were writing a book about grit, specifically aimed at education, I would add a section about the myths perpetuated by teachers.  Those myths, in my opinion, include some of my Professional Pet Peeves, and you can read about some of those here:
Stop Being Friendly
Stop Giving Handouts
Stop Making It Fun
Stop Silencing the Children
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In fact, while some teachers want to put all their eggs in the basket of Brain Breaks and appeasing sensory needs, and while others want to gamble on flexible seating, once again, let us call for balance.  

Finally, in the closing paragraphs of part one, Mrs. Duckworth encourages me with these lines:
The four psychological assets of interest, practice, purpose, and hope are not You have it or you don't commodities.  You can learn to discover, develop, and deepen your interests.  You can acquire the habit of discipline.  You can cultivate a sense of purpose and meaning.  And you can teach yourself to hope.
That certainly makes me think.  As I wonder how to make practice more meaningful, how to bring purpose to what students do, and how to give my students hope, I must keep experimenting.  When it's all said and done, this book about passion and perseverance affirms what many of us already understand - that the art of teaching is every bit as important as all of the data collection and interventions we can muster.  One class of students is different from the next.  Relationships matter and are not always natural.  Getting students to want to do things is not the same thing as sneaking education into the day in the guise of fun and games.

I know, as you do, that a kid will appreciate the reward of learning more if s/he realizes the effort it takes.  Looking back at the pains of learning makes pupils understand better the value of their investment in the process.  That seems to work for many, but it works it works in different ways for different people.

I read this book from a couple of point of view - first, as an educator, as I've addressed here in helping other people develop their own grit, but secondly, as a person who must cultivate determination, goal-setting, and the rest, in myself.  How can I meet my personal goals?  How do I become the human being that I want to be - as a parent, as a teacher, and as a Christian?
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Sentence Surgery XII

12/29/2016

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Read the sentence below.  Do you see any problems?
that were the nicer thing anybody ever said to me
​Do not rewrite the sentence.  In fact, don't even fix the sentence.  Instead, on your paper, tell the writer how to correct three things.
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Grit:  Effort Counts Twice

12/28/2016

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...[M]ythologizing natural talent lets us off the hook.  It lets us relax into the status quo.  That's what undoubtedly occurred in my early days of teaching when I mistakenly equated talent and achievement, and by doing so, removed effort - both my students' and my own - from further consideration.
This, from the third chapter of Angela Duckworth's book, Grit:  The Power of Passion and Perseverance, is how many people (teachers) think.  I have seen people equate naturally successful students with successful teaching.  The kid comes into the classroom, racks up some high test scores on day one, and the teacher gets the credit.  Actually, the kid who doesn't naturally score high, but succeeds after hard work might be more of an educational achievement.
...[W]hen you consider individuals in identical circumstances, what each achieves depends on just two things, talent and effort.  Talent - how fast we improve in skill - absolutely matters.  But effort factors into the calculations twice, not once. Effort builds skill.  At the very same time, effort makes skill productive.
Duckworth likes to tell stories in this tome.  She tells of soldiers, swimmers, entrepreneurs, and actors.  Later in this chapter, she draws upon rapper/actor Will Smith.  I was particularly impressed by this quote from Mr. Smith:
The only thing that I see that is distinctly different about me is:  I'm not afraid to die on a treadmill.  I will not be outworked, period.  You might have more talent than me, you might be smarter than me, you might be sexier than me.  You might be all of those things.  You got it on me in nine categories.  But if we get on the treadmill together, there's two things:  You're getting off first, or I'm going to die.  It's really that simple.
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It is something to understand - what is grit?  It is something to study - what stops students from persistent effort?  I have seen students at both ends of the spectrum.  I've watched as some have overcome the obstacles and others have thrown their hands up in surrender.  What makes the difference?  For now, we'll have to await a later chapter in the Grit book.  For now, it is something to understand; perhaps by understanding this, we may better address the needs of all kinds of students.

I'll leave you with one last thought from the chapter.  I especially liked the clarity of these thoughts concerning the vocabulary.
I would add that skill is not the same thing as achievement, either.  Without effort, your talent is nothing more than your unmet potential.  Without effort, your skill is nothing more than what you could have done but didn't.  With effort, talent becomes skill and, at the very same time, effort makes skill productive.
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Sentence Surgery XI

12/27/2016

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Read the sentence below.  Do you see any problems?
i never thinked about it that way
​Do not rewrite the sentence.  In fact, don't even fix the sentence.  Instead, on your paper, tell the writer how to correct three things.
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Grit:  Distracted By Talent

12/26/2016

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...I began to reflect on how smart even my weakest students sounded when they talked about things that genuinely interested them.  These were conversations I found almost impossible to follow:  discourses on basketball statistics, the lyrics to songs they really liked, and complicated plotlines about who was no longer speaking to whom and why.  When I got to know my students better, I discovered that all of them had mastered any number of complicated ideas in their very complicated daily lives.  Honestly, was getting x all by itself in an algebraic equation all that much harder.
They catch Pokemon (Pokemons?  Pokemen?).  They know Batman.  They quote sports stats.  But they can't be bothered to learn new things, even when things are explained clearly and repeatedly in step-by-step fashion.  It reminds me of the first chapter of this book, when the author explained that even students with determination need direction.  It would seem that some students have direction, but they might need redirection to get them interested and motivated to learn.

In Angela Duckworth's book, Grit, she mentions this:
For years, several national surveys have asked:  Which is more important to success - talent or effort?  Americans are about twice as likely to single out effort.  That same is true when you ask Americans about athletic ability.  And when asked "I you were hiring a new employee, which of the following qualities would you think is most important?" Americans endorse "being hardworking" nearly five times as often as they endorse "intelligence."
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Of course, once on the job, an employer might expect his/her employee to put that hard work to the grindstone and to quickly gain some intelligence.  If the hard work becomes just a spinning of the wheels or is directionless, then the hard work is vanity.  Still, to understand that perseverance is at twice as appealing than intelligence is something we should not pass over.

Our own Principal Bozarth recognizes that the way we praise makes a different in this regard, as well.  When we tell our children we are proud of their achievement, it yields a different response than when we praise them for their hard work.  It makes sense, doesn't it?  To receive similar praise, the smart kid will achieve high on simple tasks, but to get more intrinsic praise, the gritty kid will work even harder next time.

The point of this chapter in Duckworth's book might be that we say we value hard work over talent, but our actions reward in just the opposite manner.  When a smart child sits in my room and answers my questions with the responses I am looking for, it makes me feel better as a teacher, but why?  When that child entered my room, s/he already had skills; I had very little to do with his/her success.  But when a child enters my room and shows growth due to giving it everything s/he has, I might more appropriately feel a modicum of personal success.  As a teacher I should stop being so distracted by talent, and look more for the motivation and the potential of my students.

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Happy Christmas to All...

12/25/2016

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...And to All a Good Night!

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Music Appreciation:  Up On the Housetop

12/24/2016

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Students are often called upon to read "chorally".
That is, they read together simultaneously as a group.

Repeating this practice assists young readers with reading fluency -
the speed, accuracy, and inflection of  oral reading.

Why not, since it's called "choral" reading anyway, actually read the chorus of a song? ​
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Sentence Surgery X

12/23/2016

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​Read the sentence below.  Do you see any problems?
i new it wood bee hard but that didnt keep me from trying
​Do not rewrite the sentence.  In fact, don't even fix the sentence.  Instead, on your paper, tell the writer how to correct three things.
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Grit:  Showing Up

12/22/2016

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What is grit?

Passion?

Perseverance?

​Stamina?

Living life like it's a marathon - not a sprint?​
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After viewing the speech in the video (above), I decided to pick up a copy of Angela Duckworth's book, Grit:  The Power of Passion and Perseverance.
​
The first chapter title - Showing Up - caught my eye.  For the past few years I have noticed that certain students will not approach a problem when it appears in form to be difficult or unpleasant.  These students literally give up without reading a single word.  They refuse to consider that the problem may be dissected into smaller chunks, that their current skills may be sufficient for solving new problems, or that they might learn something from doing a difficult task.  They turn their backs instead of toeing the line.  They put their heads in their hands, and they stare at their shoes.  For some, I must break through their barriers to build them up to the level that they will even show up.

The first chapter in Duckworth's book set out to contrast people like these students with the other end of the spectrum.  In the same classroom, I can easily and continually call upon certain students who refuse to give up. These are the ones who enjoy a challenge, even at the risk of making mistakes or losing face.  These are the students who are joyful when they discover mistakes and find fixes.

I feel like the first chapter gave me these paragraphs to ponder:

Why were the highly accomplished so dogged in their pursuits?  For most, there was no realistic expectation of ever catching up to their ambitions.  In their own eyes, they were never good enough.  They were the opposite of complacent. And yet, in a very real sense, they were satisfied being unsatisfied.  Each was chasing something of unparalleled interest and importance, and it was the chase - as much as the capture - that was gratifying.  Even if some of the things they had to do were boring, or frustrating, or even painful, they wouldn't dream of giving up.  Their passion was enduring.

In sum, no matter the domain, the highly successful had a kind of ferocious determination that played out in two ways. First, these exemplars were unusually resilient and hardworking.  Second, they knew in a very, very deep way what it was they wanted.  They not only had determination, they had direction.

It was this combination of passion and perseverance that made high achievers special.  In a word, they had grit.
I like the word direction.  Perhaps that's the inspiration for all of the arrows on the book's jacket.  While the word does nothing to provide answers to the questions - 
  • How do I build grit in my students?
  • What can I do to teach kids a solid work ethic?
  • How can I keep them motivated for the long run?
​- the word does provide a blurry path that, if followed, might lead to something fruitful.
​In fact, the inner flap of the book jacket promises these insights:
Why any effort you make ultimately counts twice toward your goal

How grit can be learned, regardless of IQ or circumstances

How lifelong interest is triggered

How much of optimal practice is suffering and how much is ecstasy

Which is better for you child - a warm embrace or high standards

​The magic of the Hard Thing Rule

We should all be able to understand the idea of never being satisfied, as well.  With 27 years in the public school classroom as an educator, I have come to the conclusion that I will never satisfy the desire I have to be an excellent teacher.  Every year, I attempt to improve.  Instead of becoming satisfied that I have achieved my goal, I must instead conclude that I should be "satisfied being unsatisfied".

I shall read on about grit.  I'm not sure what to expect, but I'll be on the lookout for any clarity that might present itself.
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Christmas Party

12/21/2016

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The second party of the year was quite engaging. Hoggatteers had more activities to do than they had time to do them. I couldn't even get enough pictures, as I was busy strategizing for the massive "snowball fight" that topped it all off. It made for a memorable last school day of 2016. Thank you to all of the "party parents" who planned and executed the event; Hoggatteer families are the best families out there!
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Infographic:  A Christmas Carol

12/20/2016

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Charles Dickens' story is one of the best-constructed tales of the season.
Course Hero Infographic
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More Holiday Math

12/19/2016

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Some of the questions that may have stymied our class on the recent mid-year tests involves the coordinate plane. With that in mind, we pulled out a discussion of coordinates for some more holiday mathematics, Friday. Students found and connected a few points on the grid to make their final Christmas portrait.  The work here is not simple, but does reinforce the initial lesson about plotting points on the coordinate plane.
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Music Appreciation:  Christmas Every Day

12/18/2016

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Students are often called upon to read "chorally".
That is, they read together simultaneously

as a group.

Repeating this practice assists young readers with reading fluency - the speed, accuracy, and inflection of  oral reading.

Why not, since it's called "choral" reading anyway, actually read the chorus of a song?
0 Comments

Motion and Design:  Design Requirements

12/17/2016

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Our newest challenge was to design a vehicle that could cover a specified distance between five and seven seconds - not too fast and not too slow.  The group dynamic and interpersonal skills came into play here, as well as the academic challenge.  It's interesting to see which students step up as leaders, which are willing to follow along, and which would rather sit out.  This is where I like to see kids discuss and collaborate (a not-so-easy task for fourth graders).
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