I would be willing to bet that most of our camp parents have
attended parent-teacher conferences with some regularity. You have sat across
the table from a variety of dedicated teachers that have offered advice on how
to help your kids improve math, science, reading and writing skills. You have
listened to accomplishments, goals and expectations. For some parents this can be an extremely
rewarding conversation. One that makes you pat yourself on the back and say,
“Yes, my kid is going to make it.” For
others of you, this quarterly conversation can come with a lot of anxiety.
Perhaps school isn’t going as well as you would like for your kid. You may be
left scratching your head and saying “what is my kid doing wrong?” What if there was something else on that
report card? Something that you could work on without the use of books or chalk
boards or overhead projectors?
Paul Tough, author of How
Children Succeed: Grit, Curiosity, and the Hidden Power of Character, suggests
that schools should be doing just that (and don’t worry, some are). They should
be offering kids a “character report card”.
That parents, school officials, teachers and kids should be in a
constant conversation about how well kids are learning to cope with adversity,
make friends, work through problems and my favorite – exhibit grit. Mr. Tough
argues that in order for kids to truly succeed in life they need to find safe
ways to do what every parent (and anyone else that loves kids) find it hard to
do – fail.
Mr. Tough writes, “For many of us, character refers to
something innate and unchanging, a core set of attributes that define one’s
very essence. {Researchers} Seligman and Peterson defined character in a
different way: a set of abilities or strengths that are very much changeable —
entirely malleable, in fact. They are skills you can learn; they are skills you
can practice; and they are skills you can teach”.
I recently had the opportunity to see Paul Tough speak at
the American Camp Association (ACA) annual conference in Dallas, TX and what
struck me while listening to him talk was that camp is exactly the place that
offers all of the things he is talking about. Plainly put our kids “fail” on a
daily basis. They don’t win sailing races, they don’t quite get enough points
for an award in archery, they disagree with a cabinmate and the event they plan
for a group of younger kids is a complete disaster. Sometimes they go days or even weeks without
earning a single award or accomplishing a tangible accolade.
I, not once, but twice have worked with a kid that has tried
to get up on skis and/or wakeboards countless times with no success (don’t
worry, the kids counted). 200 times of
thinking they are going to accomplish something and “failing”. 90 times of
having the “embarrassment” of falling, quite literally, on their face in front
of a group of “accomplished” peers. But they tried. They tried very hard. And was there disappointment sometimes? Yes. Was
there a feeling of “failure” on occasion?
Of course. And not just my poor
skiers. All the kids.
So what made it all worthwhile? On the 97th and 211th
try respectively, the world stopped spinning.
The water felt a little warmer and the sun shined a little brighter. And
I’m serious. No kidding. The faces of those kids could have stopped an army.
One of the kids got so excited she flung her arms in the air and let go. Her
jubilance literally propelled her out of her skis. Shortest, successful run of
skiing ever.
That grit, that determination, that ability to fail and fail
and fail is exactly why we, “camp people”, do what we do. It may not be what we
are supposed to tell the parents of our campers, but we love to see kids fail. So
when the report cards from the school year are hung on the fridge and the bags
are packed for camp we ask you to turn your attention towards the other report
card - the one that lists creativity, worldliness, kindness, teamwork and of
course, grit.
And it is our promise to you as camp parents that we will do
everything we can to help your kids fail this summer. The best part about that failure - they are
going to have a blast doing it.
this made me smile. so true. camp builds up character so much! <3
ReplyDeleteyour a good writer, but you don't need me to tell you things you already know :) love you.