Debbie Silver is an invaluable source of wisdom for parents. Her latest edition of Fall Down 7 Times, Get Up 8 is no exception. It is filled with such wonderful, compassionate advice for parents that will not only help their children learn but also strengthen their relationship. This book asks challenging questions that are essential for any parent to ask themselves, but it will also lift parents up and even let them laugh a little or a lot!
Once again, Debbie Silver has deftly navigated both pedagogy and andragogy in a transformative and authentic work full of endearing humility, robust research, and oxygenating verve. And then there’s that one line she writes where my heart stopped, then soared with fists thrown skyward: “What if he flies?” I’m carrying this moment—and its powerful lens—with me forever.
Debbie Silver always has a way to inspire readers to jump into action. Her words are deep and her message is clear! Fall Down 7 Times, Get Up 8 (2nd edition) is filled with research and practice that will help students and adults learn that struggle is a part of life, and it's not whether we get knocked down but how we get back up that matters.
The first edition of Debbie Silver's Fall Down 7 Times, Get Up 8 was an essential volume for every teacher's library, and the second edition is, too! If you want to support your students' social emotional learning, this is the ‘how-to’ handbook for you!
In Fall Down 7 Times, Get Up 8, the second edition of her Corwin bestseller, Silver has provided educators (and I include parents who have been pressed into service during the pandemic) with myriad ways of engaging kids in their own learning. We should, says Silver, embrace failure, not avoid it. Failure is an integral part of the continuous improvement process, as are mistakes, missteps, unforced errors, blunders, gaffes, and wrong turns.
This is a book that every parent and teacher needs right now. Silver’s updates offer practical steps to cultivate resiliency based on ancient proverbs, theory, evidence, the wisdom of educators, and her own practice that spans nearly a half century.
She’s done it, AGAIN! I am in awe of how Dr. Debbie Silver takes educational research and crafts it into a reader-friendly guide to classroom success. Fall Down 7 Times, Get Up 8, is a today’s world look at what education is really about. Filled with relevant ideas and practical strategies to promote learning, this book should be placed in the hands of everyone working with kids.
Almost ten years ago, I read the first edition of Fall Down 7 Times, Get Up 8 and absolutely loved it! The second edition is even better! It’s quite simply the best book I’ve ever read explaining success factors related to learning. Debbie does a skillful job of blending theory, practice, research, application, and personal experience together with generous doses of humor and irreverence to provide readers with a simple and logical examination of success factors.
Fall Down 7 Times, Get Up 8 is a one-stop shop for gaining insights into working with students/children. Not only does this book thoroughly explain key psychological and developmental concepts, but it also identifies issues and strategies to address them. The author uses the perfect combination of real-life experiences and research to convey relevant concepts to the reader.
Debbie Silver picks right back up from where she left off almost ten years ago with the reissue of her best-selling book: Fall Down 7 Times, Get Up 8: Teaching Kids to Succeed. This newest edition highlights strategies and solutions to solving some of the most common plagues within education. This book is a must-read for any teacher, parent, or administrator who is seeking new strategies to promote independent learning and that lead to larger increases in student success.”
There are so many reasons I adore Dr. Debbie Silver. She is practical, funny, and always challenges my thinking. I promise after you read the new edition of Fall Down 7 Times, Get Up 8, you will be compelled to rethink your preconceived thoughts on student failure, learned helplessness, and reward systems. A great book for any educator—plus it's perfect for an entire staff.”