Week 1 - Post 4: Reading - GETTING an A

Before I really start into the reading, you first need to know something about me: despite being reasonably good at anything I've put my mind to, I am made physically ill by grades and by performance reviews. Seriously... just checking grades on the FSO makes my stomach flip around wildly and my brain come up with all sorts of worst-case scenarios even though chances are the grades will be fine. I even felt anxiety when I had to get my car emission-tested last week, and I wasn't even the one who had to pass the test.

I very rarely fail... and by fail I mean all-out fall on my rear end fail, but the few times I have, the repercussions were severe. We live in a world that so often is unconcerned with how often you do things right and more interested in judging you by your failures. In that kind of world it's frightening to take risks and try something new because what would happen if you tried and it didn't work out? You'd be a failure.

So throughout this reading I found myself thinking about what life would be like if we were more apt to think along the lines of giving an A. Then I wondered what it would be like to be on the receiving end of that A all the time.

Take our experience here at Full Sail. Granted, it's a pretty supportive environment here, but say for the sake of the argument Full Sail could make all their courses pass/fail as opposed to letter graded (without losing their accreditation, that is). What would that mean for us students?

On a whole, we're not a group of people who play it safe with assignments, but I have noticed anxiety spikes when classmates go out on a limb with a project. We want to experiment, but we also don't want to be way off-base with our assignments. In the "giving an A" world it would be okay for us to occasionally misinterpret an assignment. Instead of a bad grade, we'd just get constructive criticism from our instructors and advice on how to tackle assignments like it in the future. There would be no stain on our GPA and no single mark pulling us away from the grade we feel actually reflects how much effort we put into the learning process.

As much as we're learning a lot now, I think we'd learn even more under the "giving an A" system. We'd try even more things and not stress out so much about whether we did what the instructor wanted or not. We could have discussions about where things didn't go right without dredging up the feelings of deep disappointment from receiving a bad grade. We could truly look at a mistake as a learning experience rather than a failure that defines us (sure, people recommend that you look at all failures as learning experiences, but it's pretty hard to do that when that failure is dragging down your GPA).

I think I'd be a less-anxious and more courageous learner in this system.
______________________________________________________________

On a note related more to the overall reading rather than this particular chapter, I thought I'd share one of my favorite TED Talks. Earlier in our reading it was noted that people limit possibilities when they try to define and measure things according to what they perceive as the one true interpretation. In this video Malcolm Gladwell talks about a turning point in which one scientist stopped looking for the one perfect product and realized he should instead be looking for the perfect products.

Enjoy!

3 comments:

DuetimesR said...

I enjoyed your post and the TED video. I am thinking now if it is correct to have expectations guiding outcomes of educational projects? I do not have an answer, but I imagine that an education system with high degree of creativity due to freedom to take risks could be worthwhile.

Tanya Doll said...

I couldn't agree with you more. Having to worry about grades not only places undue pressure to get "the grade" but undermines the creative side that allows us to take that leap and risk trying a new adventure instead of playing it safe. There has been many times throughout this year with Full Sail that I have had to play it safe in order to get the assignment done based on the requirements to get the grade necessary to pass the class. This has left me feeling like I missed an opportunity to really express myself in terms of what I could do or attempt to work through. I especially think at this level of learning that grades should be more of a pass/fail philosophy to inspire more creative thinking and constructive criticism from which to build on. A place where failing would simply be that you just didn't do the assignment. Let's face it, the only one you really hurt when you fail to do an assignment is yourself yet, when you really worked through a project and still got a bad grade on it leaves you feeling rejected and says your lacking when in fact you are none of those.
Setting high expectations and demanding that I be the best I can be is how I operate. When I give my best I would like to be praised for a job well done, told what was good about it, what needs improvement and other comments to help me with learning not given a grade which says you completed all the requirements. Who knows, Bianca? maybe there will one day be a university of pass/no pass or great job/needs work.

jbb said...

Grades, grades, grades... it's one universal constant, "tell me I'm doing great" and "don't penalize me for being human." ack.

Post a Comment