What happens to your mind when there isn’t a word to describe an authentic experience? Language developed as a direct reflection of both internal and external experience. A way to communicate, relate to one another, expand emerging ideas. There are few, if any, situations that don’t have a corresponding name. The everyday value of this convention is obvious. But value in higher order ways - to help you make sense of difficulty and discover the meaning that propels you forward - is what we’re writing about here today.
"Struggle, errors, mistakes, failures. Let’s give students the language they need to start understanding negative experiences as positive opportunities." Stealing this and making a classroom/teacher workroom poster.
"Struggle, errors, mistakes, failures. Let’s give students the language they need to start understanding negative experiences as positive opportunities." Stealing this and making a classroom/teacher workroom poster.