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How Grades Harm Students: Professor Joshua Eyler on Zoom

Failing Our Future: How Grades Harm Students and What We Can Do About It.

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6 at 4:00 pm (Pacific) on Zoom
Tickets:www.praxispeace.org
$15 for Praxis members (non-members: $20)

Eyler’s book by the same title is an indictment of the grading system in American schools and colleges―as well as a blueprint for how we can change it. One of the most urgent and long-standing issues in the US education system is its obsession with grades. In his new book, “Failing Our Future,” Joshua R. Eyler shines a spotlight on how grades inhibit learning, cause problems between parents and children, amplify inequities, and contribute to the youth mental health crisis.

Eyler illustrates how grades interfere with students’ intrinsic motivation and perpetuate the idea that school is a place for competition rather than discovery. Grades force students to focus on rewards and distract them from exploring ideas or pursuing interests beyond what they’ll be tested on. In fact, grades significantly impede the learning process. They are also significantly affecting children’s physical, emotional, and psychological well-being. Rates of anxiety, depression, and suicidal ideation have spiked, and academic stress tied to grades is a leading cause of this escalation. This is a must-see program for all parents, grandparents, educators, and people interested in improving education in America.

Joshua Eyler is the Director of the Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning and a clinical assistant professor of teacher education at the University of Mississippi. He is also the author of “How Humans Learn: The Science and Stories behind Effective College Teaching.” He previously worked on teaching and learning initiatives at Columbus State University, George Mason University, and Rice University. He received his B.A. in English from Gettysburg College in 2000 and his M.A. and Ph.D. in Medieval Studies from the University of Connecticut in 2006. He writes about teaching, learning, parenting, and popular culture.

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