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“Is it that you can’t, or that you don’t want to?”

I am reading LouAnne Johnson’s “Teaching Outside the Box”. In one chapter she refers to the question that her mentor once asked his student: “Is it that you can’t, or that you want to?” He challenged his student to replace all his “can’ts” with “don’t want to”. The statement, “I can’t solve this problem” becomes “I don’t want to solve this problem”, which is usually false for most students. They do want to. They just don’t have the confidence or assertiveness to attack the problem and solve it. It is must easier to go with “I can’t”.

Today my student told me he “can’t be a leader”, and that his homeroom teacher always tells him so. I asked him, do you really think you can’t, or do you simply not want to?

No one wants to fail at anything. I know he wants to be a leader, to be trusted with responsibility. He just always assumed he “couldn’t”. So, he took on an apathetic attitude towards everything he tries. He lets things he tries disappoint him because he expects to disappoint. He shows indifference to protect himself from “failing”, which he assumes he will do if he tries. I told him that he must not take what his homeroom teacher assumes, to be his own assumption.

Today he realized he could (do anything), as long as he acknowledged that he wanted to.

By Natasha Chiang

Teacher candidate in the UBC B.Ed Program, with a background in psychology (BA, 2012);

I am a teacher at heart, and an aspiring educator; I am always joyful in learning alongside children. This blog documents my experiences in Vancouver as a young adult, student teacher, and friend. I am a reader and I like to take photographs and write in purple ink.

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