I saw the beauty of education from Student L

Mondo Entertainment Updated on 2024-02-01

Student l's math scores are not ideal, always hovering in the sixties and seventies, and occasionally failing.

She had a problem with always walking slowly to the classroom after the bell rang, often the last to enter the classroom. It's hard for me to have a crush on her.

She wasn't the target of my tutoring, because there were still a few classmates in the class who were not as good as her. I often ask those students to go to the office to "add food" (to do questions).

One day, student L walked into the office with a smile on his face and said to me, "Teacher, I want to do the problem too." ”

I was very surprised and smiled and said, "Okay!".”

I thought she was just trying to be fresh, but from then on, she often took the initiative to come to me to do questions.

Not only that, but she sometimes brings other classmates to work on the questions together.

I rewarded them with notebooks and refills in recognition of their studiousness.

Subsequently, I praised them fiercely in the class for this behavior, focusing on classmate L.

I boldly ** in front of the whole class**: Student L's math score will definitely improve!My prophecies are generally accurate. ”

Student l lived up to expectations, and his mathematics scores increased steadily.

This is known in psychology as the Pygmalion effect (expectation effect): a phenomenon in which a person's expectation of another person's behavior becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.

I predicted that Student L's grades would rise, and Student L was convinced and studied with confidence, and the effect was much better than before.

I saw the beauty of education from student L.

Parents do the same with their children, and we might as well try to cast sincere expectations for our children. This sincere expectation may be able to bear good fruit.

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