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No one likes to make mistakes. We know we may not be perfect, but we try not to make too many mistakes — especially what we might consider to be stupid mistakes. College students don’t like to make mistakes either, but they will probably make some — perhaps many — mistakes throughout their college years. It is difficult, as a parent, to watch your college student make what you might consider avoidable mistakes. The problem may not be the mistakes themselves, but the attitude that both parents and students have toward their mistakes.
Making mistakes is a way of learning. We may make mistakes when we try something new, or stretch our limits. Others may have made the same mistake before us, but we may need to make the mistake ourselves to learn from it. It doesn’t matter what others have told us, we need to have the experience ourselves. College is, in many ways, practice for life. College students may stumble and fall at times — sometimes in small ways and sometimes in more serious ways — but, hopefully, they will learn from their mistakes and become wiser. As college parents, we can help our students make sense of these experiences.
It is important to realize that we, as parents, can play a valuable role in helping our students both accept, and learn from, their mistakes. Sometimes the mistakes that students make in college may have serious consequences. It is important that parents consider carefully when to intervene. (Hint: it may not be as soon as we think.) Parents need to continue to find the balance between letting go and allowing their student to make a mistake and bear the consequences, however intervening when the student’s health or safety may be at stake.
Barring a serious issue of health or safety, one of the most difficult things that college parents need to do is step back and allow their student to make some mistakes. It is from these mistakes that students will, hopefully, learn, adapt, and go on. Although we want to protect them from mistakes, the process of learning from mistakes is a transforming life skill which will help them establish an attitude for life. Students who are afraid of making mistakes, or who have been protected from ever making (sometimes serious) mistakes, may not learn how to make decisions because they become paralyzed by the fear of making a mistake. Students who are afraid of making mistakes may be reluctant to try new things — one of the key experiences in college.
Perhaps you understand the importance and value of making mistakes in college, in a relatively protected environment, but you wonder how you can help your student find value in the mistakes they may have made. Here are a few things that you can do as a parent to help.
As college parents, it is important that we recognize that our students will make mistakes. It is difficult to watch, but it is through many of these mistakes that our college students will grow and mature. We can help our students keep these experiences in perspective and see mistakes as an opportunity rather than a failure. Our students will look to us for cues about our attitude toward mistakes.
Source
Author of Article: Vicki Nelson. Article adapted from College Parent Central. Please Note: Missouri S&T does not endorse or have a relationship with SOURCE and articles are provided for information purposes only. Missouri S&T and SOURCE do not assume responsibility for error or omission in materials.
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