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May 25, 2013
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Counselor's Corner
 
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Hello EARTHS' Families,
 
I am Lori Woodley, your school counselor on Wednesdays this year.  This is my 10th year as a counselor in Conejo USD and my 19th year as a school counselor with 5 of those years being at the elementary level.  I am the proud mom of an 18 year old daughter and 15 year old son both, who like your children; bring joy and new learning to my life daily!  I am excited to be a part of the EARTHs dynamic team of teachers, administration, parents and especially students all of which in a collaborative approach will make EARTHS first year an empowering educational success.  In addition to EARTHs I serve Conejo and Park Oaks schools.  My approach is very collaborative as I believe that a team of committed and empowering people working on behalf of students gives them the most powerful and supportive space from which to grow and excel.  As a one day a week staff member I work closely with teachers, administration and parents to form plans that assist students who are struggling in a variety of ways to find social and emotional balance and academic success.  I will be presenting character education school wide in the classrooms and will work with some students in a variety of small group settings and occasionally one on one.  The best way to reach me is through my district number, 805-497-9511, ext., 507, or even better, my email at lwoodley@conejousd.org.  I hope to have the opportunity to meet many of you and your students as we work our way through this fabulous first year of EARTHS Elementary school. 
 
Warmest Regards,
 
Lori Woodley
Telling students it’s okay to fail helps them succeed — study

Telling children that it is perfectly normal to sometimes fail at school can actually help them do better academically, according to newly published research.

The results of three experiments by French researchers are not definitive but they are intuitive; kids who don’t feel overwhelming pressure to do well all the time are more likely to feel free to explore, take academic chances and not fall apart if they make a mistake. The first experiment explains how the three were conducted: 111 sixth-graders were all given very difficult anagram problems. A sub-group of the students who were told that learning can be hard and that they should expect to sometimes fail did better on a test measuring working memory capacity than students in two other groups who did not have the same failure-is-okay discussion. Working memory capacity is said to be a good predictor of reading comprehension, problem solving and other aspects of academic achievement.
 
The findings are explained in article called “Improving Working Memory Efficiency by Reframing Metacognitive Interpretation of Task Difficulty,” by Frederique Autin and Jean-Claude Croizet of the University of Poitiers and the National Center for Scientific Research in Poitiers, France. The article was published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General by the American Psychological Association.
 
In a news release about the article, Autin was quoted as saying: “We focused on a widespread cultural belief that equates academic success with a high level of competence and failure with intellectual inferiority. By being obsessed with success, students are afraid to fail, so they are reluctant to take difficult steps to master new material. Acknowledging that difficulty is a crucial part of learning could stop a vicious circle in which difficulty creates feelings of incompetence that in turn disrupts learning.”
 
And Croize was quoted as saying, “People usually believe that academic achievement simply reflects students’ inherent academic ability, which can be difficult to change. But teachers and parents may be able to help students succeed just by changing the way in which the material is presented.”
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