Even given that people love to criticize the education system... it's actually even worse than most people think it is. It's seriously wasteful and frequently harmful.
Foster a course environment that encourages a growth mindset through periodic non-graded assessments.
This strategy alleviates the negative feedback loop associated with poor performance and gives students a chance to learn from mistakes.
Failure should be reframed as a learning opportunity. When students are given room to fail, they’re inspired to make more genuine discoveries and ACTUALLY understand what they’re learning vs just memorization
The current education ecosystem has high enough stakes as it is. We shouldn’t teach students that failing one particular test will be the end all be all.
Heard a middle school teacher say that they try to make education "less fun" so that students are “ready” for high school and college…
But is that the teacher's fault? Removing that massive stigma is necessary and one of the reasons I initially focused on changing higher-ed
Cram content and memorize vocab -> Take a test -> Now you get to memorize new words because you passed your last test (barely) -> Rise and repeat for 20 years
Rather than solely building curriculum for how a ‘normal student’ learns, we should study the highest performers and build towards what is proven to work best. Only teaching towards what’s “average” is just so limiting.
@TCEA@finleyt The focus should be on inspiring curiosity and creating a deeper connection with the material.
Starting with vocab and using songs, although helpful in certain cases, tends to promote memorization rather than actual comprehension.
@Hadley Notion can be way more efficient too for both founders and investors - we looked to make ours 'self-serve'.
Already know our solution well? Stay high level and skip ahead.
Want to know more about traction or a particular user? - just select the use-case module and dive deeper.
@agazdecki Assuming you know what perfection looks like slows things down even more! Launch with and maintain a strong vision, but always be learning from your users.
@dagorenouf The end of the startup journey is so glamorized that we often forget about that most overnight successes are made over the course of 10 years. Keep pushing that boulder
@heyecs Founders are constantly given advice and it is often times contradictory. Be able to choosing which advice to follow is part of what makes a great founder.