This week’s reflections
In my experience, the students most likely to try and cheat on tests are often the most capable.
The issue isn’t understanding. It’s fear of getting something wrong.
For some, a mistake feels like judgement. So they manage it.
They check answers early, avoid uncertainty and stay within what feels safe.
That limits progress.
Avoiding mistakes means avoiding the exact information that shows what needs to improve.
The exam doesn’t allow that. Every question requires a decision whether you feel ready or not.
On my mind this week
In a group of 8 students I saw this week, I posed a question.
Seven got the same question completely wrong.
That was the most useful part of the lesson.
It showed the gap clearly and gave us something to fix.
The students who engage with that improve quickly. The ones who struggle are often the ones who find it hardest to sit with being wrong.
The difference isn’t ability. It’s how they respond to the feedback. Are they going to give up? Will they keep going until they get it right?
Study tip
Answer questions you’re unsure about without checking first. Stop looking at the mark scheme!
Allow a delay between completing the question and checking the answer.
Focus on:
- Where it went wrong
- What you misunderstood
- What assumption you made
Ask for help. Get clarity. Don’t give up until you get it!
For Parents
It helps to create an environment where it’s safe to get things wrong.
Students need to be able to say they got something wrong without it feeling like a problem.
Last night, 7 out of 8 students missed the same question. That wasn’t failure. It showed exactly what needed attention.
If mistakes are hidden, gaps stay. If they’re addressed, students improve.
Resilience in exams comes from being used to things not going to plan and knowing how to respond.
Quote of the week
“The only real mistake is the one you don’t learn from.”
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