I was one of those people in high school and you're right.
Too prideful and insecure in my early adolescence to accept #1 as a possiblity, I went with #2, which framed my academic worldview until the end of my college years when I realized the above: grades are a measure of intelligence AND your willingness to work hard and apply that intelligence.
I think its important that kids be taught that fundamental principle that I didn't figure out on my own until way late in the game. If I hadn't hadn't been indoctrinated into the misleading and overly-simplistic worldview of "Good grades = you are smart," I probably wouldn't have had the problems that I did.
Yep, that was me. I was afraid of failure and afraid of putting myself out there, so I disengaged while resting in the smug self-satisfaction of "I know I'm smart. I don't need to prove that to anyone."Vault101 said:I get the impression this may in fact be a "cover" for people, they never have to try, so they never have to fail.
Yeah. I didn't get that until late into college. Grades are not simply a measure of how smart you are; they're a measure of how smart you are AND how hard you are willing to work to apply that knowledge. Growing up as a kid, I was led to believe "Good grades = you are smart." Period. So, when the schoolwork demand began to grow in middle school, and my work ethic didn't grow to match, and my grades started failing, this led me to two posssible conclusions: 1) I wasn't actually smart. 2) The grading system itself was stupid.Vault101 said:even if there was truth in the statement, again as I said, the dedication and will to work towards being "brilliant" is just as important.
Too prideful and insecure in my early adolescence to accept #1 as a possiblity, I went with #2, which framed my academic worldview until the end of my college years when I realized the above: grades are a measure of intelligence AND your willingness to work hard and apply that intelligence.
I think its important that kids be taught that fundamental principle that I didn't figure out on my own until way late in the game. If I hadn't hadn't been indoctrinated into the misleading and overly-simplistic worldview of "Good grades = you are smart," I probably wouldn't have had the problems that I did.