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Failing Better: Understanding and Supporting...
Journal article

Failing Better: Understanding and Supporting Students Through Failure in Higher Education

Abstract

This study explores how failure is understood and within higher education through the perspectives of university administrators at a mid-sized research-intensive institution in Ontario. Using in-depth interviews, the study reveals that failure in higher education exists at the intersection of individual student experiences, institutional structures, and pedagogical approaches. Themes in the discourse surrounding student failure include the fear of failing for the first time, a lack of preparedness for university study, impacts of imposter syndrome, challenges in taking ownership of academic journeys, unique barriers faced by non-traditional students, and institutional barriers that reinforce failure. While failure is promoted as a learning opportunity in higher education, institutional structures and practices often contradict this view with punitive measures that can impact students' academic careers. Building on Carr's pedagogy of failure, this research emphasizes the need for approaches that prioritize emotional well-being, open dialogue, and structured support through failure. One recommendation is to use co-curricular activities, such as Living Learning Communities, as safe spaces for students to experiment with and learn from failure without academic consequences. Overall, institutions need to better support student learning through failure while also highlighting the need to address systemic barriers and provide equitable support for diverse student populations.

Authors

Gallina M; Maclachlan J; Kandiah A

Journal

Journal of Teaching and Learning, Vol. 20, No. 1,

Publisher

University of Windsor Leddy Library

Publication Date

January 12, 2026

DOI

10.22329/jtl.v20i1.9164

ISSN

1492-1154

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