Challenging the Norm: An Action Research Study Demonstrating that Learning can Occur without Mistakes

Dhalla, Dr. Devinder (2025) Challenging the Norm: An Action Research Study Demonstrating that Learning can Occur without Mistakes. International Journal of Innovative Science and Research Technology, 10 (6): 25jun563. pp. 647-649. ISSN 2456-2165

Abstract

Traditional pedagogical theories promote the notion that mistakes are vital to learning. However, this action- based empirical study investigates whether effective learning can take place without experiencing failure. A total of 100 participants were divided into two groups: a mistake-based learning group and a mistake-free learning group, both exposed to equivalent educational interventions in psychology. The mistake-free group was provided with immediate feedback, modeling, and reinforcement techniques. Results from post-intervention assessments and statistical analysis (independent samples t-test and ANCOVA) revealed no significant advantage in learning outcomes for the mistake-based group over the mistake-free group. The study suggests that structured guidance, anticipatory reflection, and success modeling can enable efficient learning without the psychological cost of failure. Educational and therapeutic implications are discussed. Traditional pedagogical theories promote the notion that mistakes are vital to learning. However, this action-based empirical study investigates whether effective learning can take place without experiencing failure. A total of 100 participants were divided into two groups: a mistake-based learning group and a mistake-free learning group, both exposed to equivalent educational interventions in psychology. The mistake-free group was provided with immediate feedback, modeling, and reinforcement techniques. Results from post-intervention assessments and statistical analysis (independent samples t-test and ANCOVA) revealed no significant advantage in learning outcomes for the mistake-based group over the mistake-free group. The study suggests that structured guidance, anticipatory reflection, and success modeling can enable efficient learning without the psychological cost of failure. Educational and therapeutic implications are discussed.

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