Experiences of a Teacher in Relation to the Student’s Feelings of Learned Helplessness
Abstract
:“Among all the reasons, fear is the only one that is wrong”(Gustavo González-Calvo)
1. Introduction
2. Learned Helplessness and Physical Education
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Participant
3.2. Data Collection
3.3. Data Analysis
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Reflection on Incompetence Learned from Personal Biography
“Among the student body there are several children who are considered unfit for PE. In some cases, their physical limitations are compounded by the teacher’s attitude, which does not encourage them to develop a positive self-concept that would lead them to be competent and thus to live a better future life with themselves. In the planning and implementation of my sessions I have not only tried to work on improving the relationships between the different members of the group, without giving importance to the partner with whom we have to work, regardless of their psychic, physical, gender, ability or any other characteristics. I have also tried to raise the self-esteem of those who consider themselves less motor capable, making them more involved and more confident of their possibilities”.(Teacher’s Diary. March 2005)
“I am very sad to know how quickly children learn bad things and how difficult it will be for them to change their concept of themselves as they grow up. If they don’t experience success, if they don’t have a good relationship with their body, if their self-image is distorted, they will have a hard time dealing with it later. I don’t think that these are lazy children, it’s not that they look for excuses not to participate in the sessions. Rather, I think they have totally internalized that they are not good doing PE, that they are not good at it, and I often observe how what I propose to them even leads them to feel anxiety. I have to try to get them to overcome this feeling of incompetence that they carry with them, and to this end, in each class I strive to make the climate in which the session takes place as affective as possible, to continually assess the efforts they make and to offer each person what they may need. I did not experience this as a student, and it has been difficult for me to accept myself halfway as I am”.(Teacher’s Diary. April 2010)
“The best in the class in managing their effort have been an asthmatic pupil and an overweight pupil who show a high level of learned incompetence. Knowing that they were able to do the task better than the rest of their classmates was something that seemed impossible to them, and they were very happy. There are even days when they tell me that they want to dedicate the class to running”.(Teacher’s Diary. October 2009)
“I have been observing the attitude of a six-year-old student for a long time. She tries to go unnoticed, as if she were an ‘invisible’ pupil. As it is difficult for me to keep an eye on everything that happens in the session, as there are almost twenty children who require my attention, on more than one occasion it has gone unnoticed. However, it is now one of my focal points, above all because it is a clear case of learned incompetence. Every time I propose a game or activity, however simple it may be, he tells me beforehand that he doesn’t know how to do it. Today, for example, we played “dodgeball” ; the first thing he said to me was that he didn’t know how to play, to which I replied that I had already played more times and knew perfectly well what it was about. But what he really meant was that he can’t dodge the balls that are thrown at him. Although we have changed the game so that the "touched" are not eliminated, but become pitchers, does not improve their involvement. As a pitcher, she is not considered good either, and she spends the game glued to the wall, just on the opposite side of where the ball is”.(Teacher’s Diary. October 2009)
“I continue to try to avoid, fundamentally with two first-cycle schoolchildren, the development of fears, fears and refusals towards physical practice because they believe they are incapable of doing what I am asking them to do. I design tasks in which they all go through situations of success, but where each one also experiences situations of failure. That is, no one is bad enough to not be able to overcome certain challenges, nor is anyone good enough not to keep learning and trying. With the second cycle students, the opposite is true, that there are two students who are not good at driving and yet they consider themselves excellent. I see that in situations where they are not able to overcome the challenge they are more aware of reality and see that they do not know how to do everything, which makes them try harder”.(Teacher’s Diary. November 2009)
“I have noticed for several days now that some students, always the same ones, as soon as they consider that the practice is difficult or that they might not be able to do it well, make excuses not to have to face it. Suddenly they tell me that yesterday they hurt their ankle, that their belly hurts, that they are dizzy, and this is happening at this point in the course when we are starting to work on strategies in collective games and sports. I know that what is happening to them is that they do not want their esteem to be damaged, they are thinking about what others will say or think”.(Teacher’s diary. February 2011)
“In today’s class, devoted to strategy in games, one student has refused to participate because she is not good at playing, and her classmates are continually scolding her for it. They know full well that I do not tolerate mockery of others, but it appears at times when they think I am not aware of it. So much so that this girl, although she is on the pitch, it is as if she were not there, and when, because of the changes I am making (including the fact that the ball circulates around the whole team before I can shoot at goal), it becomes essential that her teammates involve her, she immediately becomes nervous, exclaims that she does not know how to do it and gets rid of the ball immediately”.(Teacher’s Diary. February 2011)
“In the different sets of the game in the student’s team with a low feeling of competence, discussions are frequent. Her teammates get angry at her clumsiness, and she gets angry at herself for her continuous mistakes during the game, which are bigger and more serious when the others reproach them, thus entering a vicious spiral. I find it hard to keep quiet and not intervene all the time, but I want them to design their strategies and fix the problems in an appropriate way”.(Teacher’s diary. February 2011)
“I see that little by little they are making her more involved in the game, suggesting options to her and she is putting them into practice. I even hear some positive reinforcement from some of her classmates, of the "very well done" type. I’ve even seen her smile at others”.(Teacher’s diary. February 2011)
4.2. Opening Up Perspectives on Learned Incompetence among Future PE Teachers
“The teacher that I want to be with them I show them, so that they see it and I show them, so that they understand it, so that they embrace it, so that they apprehend it. But I also show them the master that I am (and this, inevitably, I do): they see me every day, with my questions, with my interests, with my provocations towards them, but also with my contradictions and difficulties), and I show them the students who are (sometimes happy, sometimes carefree, sometimes experts in the fictitious game of university teaching, in the tricks to pass without getting personally involved, without risking anything of themselves, sometimes sincere and passionate, sometimes disoriented with what I want from them and trying to translate it into conventional measures of school tasks, sometimes honest with themselves and with the commitment they want to assume). And I also show them the teacher I want them to be. And that in reality it only returns the question to them, asking them about the teacher they want to be so that they ask themselves seriously and thoroughly”.[65], p. 16
“I have proposed the reading of two articles that deal with the problem of the lack of interest of the students towards the subject of PE and the feelings of learned motor incompetence. Next week we will devote part of the practical class to discussing this, and I ask you to draw up a sketch in which the main ideas of these articles are reflected. I am trying to get them to develop strategies that they will have to put into practice in the near future and, above all, to shape the type of teacher they want to become: whether one who is committed to the students, or one who has chosen the profession because he or she considers it simple and well-paid”.(Professor’s Diary. April 2011)
“In class we work on issues similar to those they will have to face in their day-to-day classroom life, aspects related to discipline, motivation, low involvement of school children and the feelings of helplessness that some of them show. The intention is to make them aware of the responsibilities inherent in the profession they have chosen and to develop a critical, fair and equitable sense. It is not in vain that their future work involves training the citizens of tomorrow, people for whom it is essential to strive to make them capable, full and happy with themselves”.(Professor’s Diary. April 2011)
“They are the ones who talk about helping learners to strive with ideas and information to build their own knowledge. […]. While others may be satisfied if students do well in exams, the best teachers assume that learning makes little sense if it is not able to produce a lasting and important influence on the way people think, act and feel”.[68], p. 28
5. Conclusions
“To propose a more equitable learning in which all students can have opportunities to receive rewards and taste success, success that must be redefined in terms of personal improvement and not of improvement of others”.[3], p. 130
“Becoming competent in PE must be a joyful, creative and productive undertaking that must be studied in the places and contexts where it is carried out, and in which teachers and researchers must maintain a close relationship, and in which teachers must be researchers of their own reality”.[3], p. 134
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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González-Calvo, G. Experiences of a Teacher in Relation to the Student’s Feelings of Learned Helplessness. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 8280. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17218280
González-Calvo G. Experiences of a Teacher in Relation to the Student’s Feelings of Learned Helplessness. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(21):8280. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17218280
Chicago/Turabian StyleGonzález-Calvo, Gustavo. 2020. "Experiences of a Teacher in Relation to the Student’s Feelings of Learned Helplessness" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 21: 8280. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17218280
APA StyleGonzález-Calvo, G. (2020). Experiences of a Teacher in Relation to the Student’s Feelings of Learned Helplessness. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(21), 8280. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17218280