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The importance of risk-taking in the science classroom

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Studentsā€”and teachersā€”can learn from taking risks, even making mistakes. Read on to find out why and how.

By æģ²„app Staff | August 29, 2022

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Hear from science educator Valeria Rodriguez on our Science Connections podcast

In this episode of Science Connections: The Podcast, host Eric Cross sits down with , a Miami-based science educator, instructional technologist, and illustrator.

During the episode, Rodriguez describes how she uses real-world projects to make lessons more meaningful, and why teaching students to sketchnoteā€”a way of creating visual summaries of ideasā€”helps them take risks they can learn from and increases their conceptual understanding in science.Ģż

Read on for a peek at the episode, where youā€™ll learn more about the role of creativity in science and the importance of risk-taking in the classroom.Ģż

Risk aversion among students today

Valeria is a science educator, instructional technologist, and illustrator (not to mention former college athlete and Peace Corps member). She also combines her science and art expertise to work as a graphic facilitator, which is her role on a STEAM team teaching third through fifth graders in Miami, FL.Ģż

One thing Valeria has noticed in her classrooms is that her students often seem wary of taking risks and getting things wrong. How does she try to challenge and change this? Art.Ģż

Valeria works with her students to use drawing as a form of note-taking. In the process, she says, ā€œI mess up all the time. I scratch things out because my students in general are risk-averse. They donā€™t want to make mistakes. And drawing is one of those things that taught me that itā€™s okay to make mistakes.ā€Ā 

Eric Cross says he sees the same risk aversion with his 7th graders. ā€œWhen I ask them to give me a hypothesis about a phenomenon that Iā€™m going to teach, I say, ā€˜Itā€™s okay to be wrongā€™ā€”but I see them drift to the Chromebook and want to Google it.ā€

Creativity in science versus ā€œgetting it rightā€Ā 

Sometimes risks lead to mistakes. But mistakes are not dead ends, these educators say. Mistakes are opportunities. They present opportunities not only for academic learning, but also for personal growth.ĢżĀ 

Of course, taking a risk may still deliver an expected or intended result. But even when it doesnā€™t, that result can be valuable.Ģż

Eric describes an activity where his students walk around the school campus swabbing various items to see what would grow in Petri dishes. ā€œSome things grew and some things didnā€™t.Ģż Some of the experiments didnā€™t yield the cool results,ā€ he says.Ģż

But that is exactly what gave the class the chance to speculate and learn about what factorsā€”temperature, a pathogen, the swabbing techniqueā€”might have prevented growth.Ģż

Risk-taking also supports studentsā€™ personal growth, often in ways that prepare them to learn even more.Ģż

For one thing, taking risks helps students practice tolerating uncertainty.Ģż

ā€œSometimes my kids are frustrated because I donā€™t have yes or no answers,ā€ says Valeria, citing the example of an activity with a weather balloon. ā€œWe donā€™t know how high itā€™s gonna go. Is the GPS tracker gonna work? We donā€™t know, but we have to do all the steps and find out. I have to say, ā€˜Itā€™s okay to be frustrated.ā€™ā€Ā 

Taking risks can also lead to results that are less measurable, but equally valuable. When she does art and sketchnoting with her students, ā€œSome people will say they ā€˜messed upā€™ the drawing,ā€ Valeria says. ā€œBut you know what? They gave it character.ā€

How teachers can model risk-taking

ā€œPart of our job is also taking risks,ā€ says Valeria, describing the time her class wound up having to do a tethered weather balloon launch because they couldnā€™t get approval in time to launch the balloon in their location near an airport.ĢżĀ 

ā€œA parent said, ā€˜Oh, youā€™re not releasing the balloon,ā€™ā€ she recalls. ā€œI was like, ā€˜Well, this is a lot of work, too, and I went back to my class and I was like, ā€œYou know what? I took a risk to do this project. I could have played it safe with a handout of a weather balloon,ā€ she laughs, ā€œor, you know, a YouTube video. But we are continuing to push.ā€Ā 

She adds: ā€œI want to thank the teachers who keep trying to do the hard things that arenā€™t tried and tested.ā€Ā 

Eric agrees. ā€œThere arenā€™t a lot of opportunities for students to see adults in positions of authority or that they respect or admire model failure,ā€ he says.Ģż

Teachers can model risk-taking and ā€œfailureā€ outside of what theyā€™re teachingā€”by just being who they are. ā€œI cycle and I have scars everywhere. The image in my head is ā€˜Iā€™m a cyclist,ā€™ not ā€˜Iā€™m banged up,ā€™ā€ she says. ā€œThey give me character and I keep riding.ā€Ā 

Listen to the whole podcast episode hereĀ and subscribe to Science Connections: The Podcast here.Ģż

About Amplifyā€™s Science Connections: The Podcast

Science is changing before our eyes, now more than ever. So how do we help kids figure that out? How are we preparing students to be the next generation of 21st-century scientists?

Join host Eric Cross as he sits down with educators, scientists, and knowledge experts to discuss how we can best support students in science classrooms. Listen to hear how you can inspire kids across the country to love learning science, and bring that magic into your classroom for your students.

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