Jessica Lahey is a teacher, writer, and mom. Over twenty years, she’s taught every grade from sixth to twelfth in both public and private schools. She writes about education, parenting, and child welfare for The Atlantic, Vermont Public Radio, The Washington Post and the New York Times and is the author of the New York Times bestselling book, The Gift of Failure: How the Best Parents Learn to Let Go So Their Children Can Succeed. She is a member of the Amazon Studios Thought Leader Board and wrote the educational curriculum for Amazon Kids’ The Stinky and Dirty Show. Jessica earned a B.A. in Comparative Literature from the University of Massachusetts and a J.D. with a concentration in juvenile and education law from the University of North Carolina School of Law. She lives in Vermont with her husband and two sons. Her second book, The Addiction Inoculation: Raising Healthy Kids in a Culture of Dependence, will be released in April 2021.
Key Takeaways:
00:25 Her favorite age group of learners to teach and why
07:24 How learning opportunities get lost when parents rescue their children
00:09 The effect of helicopter parenting on motivation and learning
11:01 The red flags about our parenting and teaching that we might need to take a look at
12:50 The difference between directive and autonomy-supportive teaching
17:52 Getting support in non-directive and free-range parenting styles
31:35 What parents should look for in a school
36:00 Her take on self-directed education
42:12 Screentimes and how students are learning differently during COVID
53:26 Building intrinsic motivation
Quotes:
“Kids who have had what’s called autonomy-supportive parenting, teaching, coaching tend to have a little more comfort with frustration, tend to be the kind of kids who can take a breath, figure it out and push through without having to sort of go to someone else for the answer.”
“What is great for learning is frequent formative assessments. It helps the kid exercise a little bit of metacognition, because they’re on a constant basis having to reevaluate what they thought they knew and what they didn’t know.”
“The reason that so many colleges and universities are switching, moving away from lecture-based teaching and towards small group teaching is that we know it works better.”
“There’s all sorts of emotional engagement that has to happen. It’s not just about interpersonal relationships, but engagement and relevance and all that stuff. That’s where the secret sauce of teaching is.”
“Being more controlling of kids has the opposite effect. It undermines their motivation to want to do the things that we’re trying to get them to do. Giving control to kids will help them feel less out of control.”
Social Links:
Download Jessica’s Bibliography: Click Here
Jessica Lahey
Website – https://www.jessicalahey.com/
LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/jessica-lahey-b815a366/
Twitter – https://twitter.com/jesslahey
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/teacherlahey