We're going to start you off with one of our favourite challenges! It works a treat every time. In fact we took this challenge to the 2016 Bristol Maker Faire and we had some very competitive fathers muscle in and take over! They did in fact show remarkable resilience, grit and determination along the way and we got our tallest tower yet, at over 2 metres.
Corinne helping some of our learners overcome their frustration as their challenge doesn't quite go to plan (spoiler alert - they never do!).
So are you ready? You're prepped as to what to expect - right? You'll looking out for moments of frustration, your child wanting to quit, as well as them showing the ability to start again and problem solve.
Now download the Paper Tower Challenge, get those 20 sheets of recycled paper and give your child their brief. Have fun and remember if your child gets angry, frustrated, annoyed with you - that is OK. These challenges are designed to do that. It is what you say to them, and the language you use that will start to make the difference as you go through more of these kinds of exercises.
Remind yourself, and your child, about what is happening in our brains when we get things wrong. Introduce this challenge as a growing your brain exercise and be explicit that it is open-ended and exploratory so there is no right or wrong - just creative solutions to be discovered along the way.
When they start to give up help them see the crossroads and the choice they have - give up and the neurons stop firing and wiring together or push on through the difficulties and spark up new neural pathways!
If you have your child's crumpled paper to hand - maybe get that out and talk to them about what is about to happen. Visualising neural activity might be helpful to them when they do start to feel emotions such as wanting to flee - remember it is the amygdala saying 'ahhh - threat - get out of here.'
Be sure to share with us how your first learning challenge goes!
Check out Alfie's story here - perhaps share this with your child so they can see they are not alone in trying to avoid mistakes. Alfie talks about it as having a scrambled egg brain! https://spark.adobe.com/page/VtDCpPXZxYcMp/