
However, as Greg Ashman has pointed out, the School of Struggle can lead students down a dark path of non-instruction that is frustrating and unfair. “We have known since the 1980s that asking students to struggle at solving problems with little teacher guidance is a terrible way of teaching,” Ashman writes, adding that that Finkle’s type of problem-based learning is “inequitable.”
Productive struggle needs to be differentiated for our students. Those accessing the material at a lower knowledge level may get confused, and the struggle ends up doing the opposite of motivating or engaging. Before teachers jump on board the problem-based learning bandwagon, they should consider the ways that difficulty can be too high — and harmful to the student.
(Contributed by Nicole Shanahan, curriculum director for mathematics, HCDE’s Teaching and Learning Center)
