March 16, 2009
Why a Kid Needs to Learn to Fail Successfully
By: Ann-Marie K. Heilman, Kyoshi
Okinawa Kenpo Karate Kobudo
Heilman Karate Academy, Inc.
In talking to a parent recently about his daughter’s review for belt ranking, I was surprised that he accepted my explanation that she could not test because she did not have all the material necessary to do so. Why was I surprised? Because no matter how many times I say “review," an adult will argue that a child’s “self esteem” will be diminished if they don’t succeed at every task placed in front of them including minor ones.
In the ensuing conversation we both agreed that she had heard me say that it was only a review to check her progress. Being a coach himself, he understood the importance of high standards. However, we both agreed that somewhere things had gone wrong in coaching and that everyone was expected to “play." Not only that, but everyone was expected to “win."
I am looking at a far greater picture here and it involves both my profession as a Board Certified Behavior Analyst (you know, behavior charts, stickers for good behavior, blah, blah, blah), and my belief that a dojo cannot award mediocrity because your life may depend on what I teach you.
I am in favor of positive reinforcement. I am also in favor of failure. Why? Because I don’t think people know how to fail correctly. Failure used to mean that you worked harder to succeed at the task so that you never had that feeling again. Parents supported you through the failure and coached you to “try again” and again and again until you either succeeded or switched gears and did something else. Once again, you accepted “failure” (maybe you switched from basketball to baseball) and moved on but no one worried that your “self esteem” was damaged forever. I won’t get into that “self esteem” stuff right now. I just want to point out that I see a dangerous road here and many dojo owners are following that road without questioning why they are doing it.
For years we have been positively reinforcing good behavior, good deeds, good something and somehow, some way, we have bought into the “lets reward them for breathing because, if we don’t, their 'self esteem' will be fractured and their lives will come crashing down around them and all is lost" (and it’s the teacher’s or the parent’s fault because they didn’t teach well enough). Let me say that I don’t buy into this baloney although I once did. I have experienced enough of life to now say unequivocally that it isn’t success from which I have learned the most – it was failing and sometimes miserable (the misery was all mine until I fixed “it”, whatever needed to be redone or relearned).
What does this have to do with a dojo? As I stated, your life may, literally, depend on what I teach you. And a child who may have to resist a possible abductor may need every GOOD technique taught them, not a sticker for “trying hard."
I am deeply concerned about “our” kids today. Where are the high standards of yore when you worked and worked at a goal until you succeeded? Parents encouraged you but did not fight with the teacher (or sensei) that “but my child tried so hard!” Again, I repeat myself, what is wrong with working towards a goal until you actually succeed?
I am now seeing young adults who are literally crushed by defeat. They can’t get off their duffs and start looking for work after losing a job because they have never experienced “losing.” They don’t know how to pick themselves up, go to Plan B, or C, and go forward because all their lives they have been allowed to NOT fail; someone has pleaded their case and argued that their “self esteem” will be diminished and their lives on hold until they succeed at the task (usually instant promotion or instant “A” as in grading a paper).
Again, what has this to do with a dojo? Because the father I was speaking to regarding his daughter’s review knew that she wasn’t going to get her belt that day – there were some things that she needed to work on – and despite her complaints that she “did the best she could,” it was still not good enough. And that is why I like to call such activities “reviews.” Even the word “test” seems to have lost its meaning. Every time you are put “to the test,” are you really expecting to pass? Only if you have done the work that qualifies you to pass, I hope. You won’t get a “sticker” if your self-defense works for you on the street. You get to keep your life. If I have allowed you or your child to get belt after belt because you showed up for class and paid your dues and not because you learned the material and excelled at it, then shame on me. And if you failed a test, did you find out what you did wrong and pass with flying colors the next time you tested? Or did you quit saying the test, or the teacher/sensei was “unfair? Life is unfair. We need to teach how to go past failure and succeed.
And there ends my rant for today after opening the can of worms known as positive reinforcement for breathing or “how do I keep them in the dojo so that I can pay my bills?" If I have to keep a kid’s (or adult’s) self-esteem at a high level and not allow them to fail and promote them at every turn for techniques that are sloppy, inadequate, and downright poor – then the doors to the dojo will have to close.
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You are so right! I teach elem school and I see this all the time. Kids today don’t want to work for anything. They want it given to them and will exert minimal effort to get things. It is disheartening. I’m not giving up, though, and neither should you. Think of their self-esteem when they finally do earn something for which they’ve worked hard – through the roof! That’s what we’re going for. Stick to your guns about this. You will end up with strong students and a strong faithful core of parents as well. I applaud you for your high standards!
I think you really hit the nail on the head with this one. If you don’t teach kids how to fail, and that failing is a learning experience, you are setting them up to fail in the real world. Life is not nearly as forgiving as a school that hands out stickers for just showing up.
I strongly agree that “failing” should be regarded in a larger context. I also think rewarding for mediocrity or just showing up could be a set up for some failure, or at the very least, disillusionment. I recently attended an awards ceremony at my son’s high school, and I swear half the student body received an award for something. It was a bit much.
Absolutely. I *hate* that kids are pushed ahead in anything just so their feelings aren’t hurt. So much more harm is being done when that happens.
I was thinking about this very same thing the other day. Our job as parents is to prepare our kids to live in the world. We’re not doing that properly when we don’t allow them to experience disappointment and failure. Life is, at best, unfair. The time to learn that is not when you’re an adult with responsibilities and bills, but when you’re a kid and can bounce back quickly and really learn from the experience.
I’ve written on this topic myself. Needless to say, I agree 100%. The most tragic part of all of this, in my opinion, is that we’re creating a generation of kids who feel as though it’s not worth doing if they can’t be the best. Their expectations are so high, and their self images so distorted, that they end up paralyzed, doing nothing rather than do something they’re not good at.
There is value in participating in an activity whether you can excel or not, whether it’s chess, music, singing or athletics. While satisfaction can come from acheiving a goal, the real joy comes from the doing of it.
I will hopefully be able to train in BJJ until I’m very old, even if I never receive another promotion. If I’m to be the oldest, longest tenured blue belt around, I’m okay with that.
More importantly, I hope that my kids learn to approach their lives in the same way. Set goals and work to acheive them, but don’t forget to enjoy yourself along the way.
Wow! Excellent post!
As a ‘young adult’ (I’m 20) I see this all the time.
I wasn’t raised like the average person my age (for a lot of reasons) and so my perspective is from the outside. Its so hard to see people Expect that they be given something that they haven’t truly worked for. As you said, so many people think that showing up and doing the requirements is enough to get by.
Sadly, it is enough – to get by. But not enough to learn. I see this in my younger brothers and sisters and in their friends. Or in my classrooms. It makes me ANGRY, because no one seems willing to put in the work to accomplish anything, they only want to be given it. I hate to say it, but a good majority of kids today (yes, I’m a kid, but I don’t feel that way) are just plain LAZY. I applaud your being firm and understanding that letting them slide by only hurts them in the long run.
We had a lesson in our dojo about that in our last ranking. Two of our brown-belts – who had expected to be promoted on the basis of knowing their kata, showing up for practice and such – were not. Our Sensei told them they were not ready to be promoted and they had to work on the same things they had been – and try again next year.
Owch.
I know that hurt. My close friend was one of those brown-belts, and he wrestled with himself for a while about it, frustrated. He wanted to quit – it hurt a hell of a lot. He’d been working for the last year and a half, and not been promoted, what was wrong with how he was doing things, he should have been moved up. He’d EXPECTED to be promoted.
Through our conversations (and my explaining his (our) new Sensei’s expectations being different from the old one) he realized that he WASN’T up to par with the standards our Sensei expected. Even if he didn’t like it, he was going to have to Reach that standard if he ever wanted to advance. That he would indeed be better for having spent so long working on the things he’s struggling with. He’s gotten much more dedicated than he was before (not that he WASN’T before, mind you).
He didn’t quit.
And so I get frustrated with the attitudes of my generation. I was raised on hard work and Not Giving Up. That you pick yourself up and Just Keep Going. I don’t like belt tests – I would be perfectly content remaining the one I am – I don’t need a test or a belt to prove I know anything, I just want to learn. But, of course, I’ve got to test, and I do. And I’ve failed. Not at a rank-examination, but in other things. And it hurts, but I know that it is just another way to tell me what I need to work on.
Last week I was scolded by my Sensei – it didn’t look as though I’d been practicing. I hadn’t been – he was right(which made the sting worse, btw). I was So Humiliated I wanted to disappear. But I was also – relieved. First, that my Sensei’s NOTICED I was doing poorly, and second that – as I KNEW I’d been not on my best – I could correct it. Being recognized for both my successes AND my failures is important to me.
Not that I fail on purpose, I hope you understand.
Anyway, great post. Opened up a lot of thinking – though no easy way to solve it. Haha.
Thanks.
Wow, that was long. My apologies!
Even adults need to learn to fail successfully!
I just attended my first Gup test at my new school. I was impressed by the way the students performed. If they weren’t performing up to the standards, they weren’t invited to test. It’s that simple. Every student I saw in that Gup test was there because they earned it, not because they are in a “belt mill”.
I have seen my children, when they were in martial arts, tested for belts they weren’t ready for. Those belts were paid for. I don’t truly believe either of them were ready to be advanced, but they were advanced anyway. My son is now, IF he goes back into martial arts, going to start out as a white belt again. His stances are terrible. He doesn’t have the focus he needs. My daughter won’t even consider going back. She didn’t enjoy her last experience. Part of that may be because she was pretty much just rushed through the ranks. By the time she’d been in martial arts for a year, she’d been bumped up to green/black belt (Tang Soo Do belt ranking at my old school).
I want them to learn from their failures (and mine). I don’t want them to be advanced up through the rank and file because they expect it. I want them to work for it, to EARN it.
Ultimately, as a parent, it’s my responsibility to help them learn from their mistakes. If they don’t learn, then they’re going to get an awful big slap in the face when they get out in the real world.
This is a thought provoking post and I really appreciate it.
Not a martial artist here, but I am a high school teacher who teaches at a school where there is a “no cut” policy and every student receives some type of award so that “feelings aren’t hurt.” I just want to scream, “suck it up!!” If everyone is perfect and awarded and gets to play even if they stink, what goals can a child truly have? If you are told you are the best, then why work any harder than you are already working? It’s so frustrating, yet I see myself sometimes falling into this trap with my own son. Hopefully, I have enough foresight and teaching experience to avoid this. Great post!!
This was a great post talking frankly about a subject that many parents find quite taboo! I know several students who’ve quit (or had their parents pull them out) Karate and BJJ after realising that it’s not something that they can master overnight.
I remember when I first started karate – I was training at a wellknown Goju-ryu school under an instructor known in the region for producing good students. What wasn’t known was that the reason he had such a talented set of students was because he literally kicked out anyone below par (I was well below par!). Immediately I decided to never train karate again…not because the instructor had told me that I was “too small, too weak and too meek” to ever progress but simply because I failed his first grading – I expected myself to excel and prove him wrong (sorta like the unlikely hero in cartoons who ends up having some supreme natural ability) without actually working for it.
One of the senior students from the club, a family friend, felt bad for me (that was pretty harsh treatment for a 8 yearold afterall!) and literally dragged me to another karate club where the instructor stressed the importance of challenging yourself before bettering yourself. It’s something I try my best to get across to the new students in my club (though how much success I have is a matter of opinion!).
…Cheesy but true story! (Sorry, long post – but you struck a nostalgic cord in me!)
I’ve got to join the chorus here, myself. I couldn’t agree more. My son definitely has the “if I can’t do it perfectly the first time, I just won’t do it” attitude and I find myself frustrated to tears with trying to counter it and to encourage him to keep trying.
I’m a web designer by trade and a graphic and costume designer by training. My son wanted to learn to draw, tried a couple of overly ambitious projects for a beginner, then stopped, because his drawings “didn’t look like Mom’s”.It took a couple of *years* (no, I’m not exaggerating here) of encouragement to get him to try again. I still don’t think he believes that my drawings then didn’t look like my drawings now. The fact that I’ve been through art school doesn’t sink in.
My son is also failing 6th grade, from lack of effort, not lack of ability. One of his teachers pulled me aside and asked if I had strong feelings about having DS repeat 6th again next year. I could visibly see her gearing herself up to argue her position as I told her I absolutely had strong feelings about it. “If he’s not doing the work, he needs to do it over again until he does.” I could tell she was genuinely surprised by my answer.
But this does lead to the question of what is a parent to do? I’ve had arguments with past teachers who passed him because “holding him back would hurt his self-esteem”. So this teacher was a pleasant surprise for me, as well. It also took me some hunting to find a dojang that wouldn’t just pass him up the belt ranks automatically. I’ve yet to find anyone who’s failed a belt test at our school, but that’s because testing is invitation only. You’re not offered the chance to test until you’ve mastered the skills of your current level.
So the bottom line is…how do we, as parents, hold our kids accountable for their actions and lack of actions when the rest of the world doesn’t?
Cheri Arbuckle
Martial Artess
http://www.martialartess.com/blog
Thank you so much for your comment…so, I’m not alone….WHEW!!!
Kyoshi
I thought I was alone in this “reward me for breathing” world! Thanks so much for your comments!
Kyoshi
Seems as you struck a cord Mrs. Heilman!
Very nice post!
Brilliant piece and well written. I echo your thoughts and am reminded of a line by Mr. Incredible in the movie, The Incredibles, “It’s psychotic! They keep creating new ways to celebrate mediocrity…”
I wholeheartedly agree. I’m constantly frustrated that at the science fair, every child gets a participation medal and it is not judged. When I was in first grade, I was in a judged science fair at my school. Getting second place was a bit of a blow, but even at that young age, I knew I could have done better.
Growing up, softball teams were ranked and only the top three got trophies. I was on both top and low ranked teams throughout my years. Nowadays, there is another participation medal given to everyone and there is no ranking (yet somehow the boy’s baseball is ranked, figure that one out).
Last year, my daughter (10 years old)performed below standards at her blue belt test, and Grandmaster explained at the end when everyone who passed got their belts, that she did not pass, and she will have the opportunity to retest the following month. I was thrilled. She knew she didn’t do well, and knowing her, she wouldn’t have embraced that new belt, knowing she didn’t earn it. She came back the following month like a new student and performed with excellence to pass her test. In fact, he has students that willingly take the fail because they know they didn’t perform to the best of their abilities. I think this is remarkable and shows a great deal of personal responsibility.
This is my long-winded way of saying that doling out medals/trophies to everyone is a way of diminishing motivation and self-esteem. When kids see everyone getting an award, the one they receive is far less special, and realize that they didn’t have to work that hard to get it.
To quote Dash from the Incredibles “If everyone is special, that means no one is”.