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    Joined: Oct 2008
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    Furiously scribbling notes for my next parent teacher conference (and probably all future conferences). This is why the hairs on the back of my neck stand up when DD brings home perfect score after perfect score. The longer we go without facing failure and learning to work through it, the greater the risk of giving up completely.

    inky #36335 01/27/09 11:21 AM
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    I came across this today in the Assessment Manifesto and thought it tied into the perfectionism issue.
    http://www.assessmentinst.com/forms/AssessManifesto-08.pdf


    Quote
    The psychological underpinnings of student motivation
    and learning success are directly relevant here. Our
    aspiration is to give each student a strong sense of
    control over her or his own academic well-being. Albert
    Bandura (1994) refers to this sense as �self-efficacy.� In
    the paragraphs that follow, he describes this continuum
    as a psychological construct. However, if the reader will
    think of this continuum in terms of the student�s sense of
    control over learning success (academic self-efficacy, if you
    will), it will become clear that the consistent application of
    principles of assessment for learning can move students
    boldly toward the productive end:
    A strong sense of efficacy enhances human
    accomplishment and personal well-being in
    many ways. People with high assurance in their
    capabilities approach difficult tasks as challenges
    to be mastered rather than as threats to be
    avoided. Such an efficacious outlook fosters
    intrinsic interest and deep engrossment in
    activities. They set themselves challenging goals
    and maintain strong commitment to them. They
    heighten and sustain their efforts in the face of
    failure. They quickly recover their sense of efficacy
    after failures or setbacks. They attribute failure to
    insufficient effort or deficient knowledge and skills
    which are acquirable. They approach threatening
    situations with assurance that they can exercise
    control over them. Such an efficacious outlook
    produces personal accomplishments, reduces
    stress and lowers vulnerability�
    In contrast, people who doubt their capabilities
    shy away from difficult tasks which they view as
    personal threats. They have low aspirations and
    weak commitment to the goals they choose to
    pursue. When faced with difficult tasks, they dwell
    on their personal deficiencies, on the obstacles
    they will encounter, and all kinds of adverse
    outcomes rather than concentrate on how to
    perform successfully. They slacken their efforts
    and give up quickly in the face of difficulties.
    They are slow to recover their sense of efficacy
    following failure or setbacks. Because they view
    insufficient performance as deficient aptitude it
    does not require much failure for them to lose
    faith in their capabilities. (p. 71)

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