Learning from Mistakes
When you get something wrong, investigate why — what did you misunderstand or overlook? Analysing errors is one of the most powerful ways to learn
Typical age: 8–9 years
“When your child gets something wrong on a test or activity, do they look at the mistake to understand what went wrong — rather than just moving on?”
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- Understanding fractions (age 9+)
Critiquing others' mathematical reasoning and explaining errors applies the universal error-analysis habit to peer arguments
- Evidence Supporting Ideas
Evaluating the strength of evidence and refuting arguments draws on the universal error-analysis habit — asking why a claim might be wrong
- Planning, Revising and Editing Writing
Revising and editing requires analysing what is wrong with the current draft — the writing form of the universal error-analysis habit
- Knowing What You Don't Know
Monitoring vocabulary gaps is a form of error and gap analysis — the same habit of investigating what you don't fully know applied to word knowledge
- Evidence Versus Interpretation
Distinguishing evidence from interpretation requires analysing where claims come from and what might be wrong with them — the universal error-analysis habit applied to historical argument
- Changing Your Mind with Evidence
Changing your mind when evidence contradicts your prediction is the science form of the universal error-analysis habit — treating surprises as information rather than failures
- Choosing a StrategyREQUIRED
Evaluating whether a strategy helped requires being able to analyse what went wrong when it didn't
- Multi-Step Problem Solving
Evaluating reasonableness using estimation and inverse operations applies the universal error-analysis habit to maths
- Reflecting After LearningREQUIRED
Reflecting on the learning process requires the ability to analyse errors — reflection without error analysis stays superficial