Let Them Fail
Young Parents Singapore|August 2017

How do you motivate a child who’s not interested in studying? JANE NG shares how she turned her son into an independent learner.

Jane NG
Let Them Fail

I remember it was an uphill task getting my eldest child, now 11, to revise for exams when he was eight.

When I enthusiastically showed him a study schedule I had planned for his first exams in Primary 2, all he did was to give it a cursory glance and mumble “okay”, before moving on to other fun activities.

The same thing happened in Primary 3. After several instances of prodding him to revise for his mid-year exams and hearing him say “I already know my work”, I decided to leave him be.

I could have forced him to sit down and revise, but thought it would not benefit him in the long run, since he was not self-motivated to learn.

Even though he said he wanted to do well, he was reluctant to put in the effort. So I thought it would do him good to learn the hard way – if he wanted good results, he would have to work for them himself.

I was frustrated that my repeated attempts to help him were not appreciated and decided not to be so “enthusiastic”, since I was not the one sitting the exams.

He came back crying after his mathematics scores were released, because he scored almost 20 marks below what he had previously got – a result of insufficient practice, lack of exposure to different questions and carelessness.

I told him in a matter-of-fact manner that he should have done his revision and there was little point crying over it after all was said and done.

He spent the June holidays doing the revision he should have done before the exams.

Let them decide

It was an effective lesson. When I subsequently read up on ways to encourage self-motivation in a child, one of the suggestions was to allow the child to make his own decisions and face the consequences.

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