My initial thought after being handed the article was how powerful the title was. "Valuable Failure" kept circling my mind multiple times as I quickly scanned the article. I thought to myself, "What on Earth does that mean? How the heck is failure valuable?" Then I started to read the article. One of Korbey’s early ideas in the article was, "...find out the consequences and learn from their mistakes." I completely agreed with her statement because students do need to learn from their mistakes. If we don't comprehend what we did wrong, and how it went wrong, we'll end up making those same mistakes time after time. Another concept that Korbey wrote in her article was, "...let the children fail." At first I was very confused, but then the title came back to me. “Valuable Failure." Parents can’t let their children not fail, it’s inevitable. Everyone has to fail at least once , and when you do, you …show more content…
A huge contribution to that belief is coming from their parents. A lot of these parents force their child to believe that anything lower than a 4.0 is failure, but in reality it isn’t. It isn’t the end of the world if your child has a 3.8 GPA because of a B+ from AP Calculus. In addition, parents should not bring forgotten homework to school. Let the pupils learn from their small mistake, because everyone forgets and fails to complete a task at one point. Students in college don’t call their parents to bring forgotten homework. They have to face the consequences for their