Week 9 – Resilience
Resilience – the ability to cope with challenges, setbacks and uncertainty – is one of the most important skills young people can develop.
In school, resilience helps pupils tackle difficult work, persist when things don’t go to plan and recover from mistakes. Beyond school, it supports wellbeing, adaptability and confidence in the face of life’s inevitable ups and downs.
Taskmaster Club, perhaps unexpectedly, provides an excellent environment for developing resilience. The nature of the tasks – unpredictable, varied and often slightly chaotic – means things rarely go exactly to plan. Pupils must adapt, rethink and try again.
And crucially, they do this in a setting where failure is not something to fear, but simply part of the process.
What Do We Mean by Resilience?
In educational contexts, resilience generally refers to the capacity to recover from difficulties, adapt to change and keep going when faced with obstacles.
Professor Angie Hart from the University of Brighton, whose research focuses on resilience in young people, describes resilience as something that can be developed through supportive relationships and positive learning environments rather than something people either have or don’t have.
More about the Resilience Framework developed by Professor Hart and colleagues can be found here:
https://www.boingboing.org.uk/use-resilience-framework-academic-resilience/
This perspective is important for schools, because it suggests resilience is not just an individual trait, it is something that learning environments can actively nurture.
What the Research Says
Educational research increasingly highlights resilience as a key factor in successful learning.
Psychologist Professor Carol Dweck’s work on growth mindset shows that when pupils believe abilities can develop through effort and practice, they are more likely to persist through challenges and learn from mistakes.
An overview of this research can be found here:
https://simplyputpsych.co.uk/psych-101-1/the-science-behind-carol-dwecks-growth-mindset-understanding-the-key-to-personal-and-professional-success
Similarly, research supported by the Education Endowment Foundation highlights the importance of metacognition and self-regulation – pupils’ ability to plan, monitor and evaluate their learning – which are closely linked to resilience when tackling difficult tasks.
More information from the EEF can be found here:
https://educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/education-evidence/teaching-learning-toolkit/metacognition-and-self-regulation
The evidence suggests that pupils benefit from learning environments where challenge is encouraged, mistakes are treated as learning opportunities, and reflection is built into the process.
How Taskmaster Club Builds Resilience
Taskmaster Club creates exactly this kind of environment.
1. Tasks That Don’t Always Go to Plan
Many tasks are deliberately open-ended and unpredictable. Teams may start with a confident strategy only to realise halfway through that it isn’t working.
This is where resilience comes into play. Pupils must adapt their thinking, modify their approach and keep going rather than giving up.
Learning to cope with that uncertainty is a powerful experience.
2. Failure Is Part of the Fun
One of the unique aspects of Taskmaster Club is that failure is often funny. Plans collapse. Towers fall over. Elaborate ideas turn out to be impossible.
Because the atmosphere is playful and supportive, pupils experience setbacks without embarrassment or judgement. Instead, those moments become opportunities to reflect, laugh and try something different next time.
This helps pupils learn that mistakes are not something to fear – they are part of learning.
3. Encouraging Persistence
Many tasks require sustained effort, problem-solving and cooperation. Teams must keep working together, even when progress is slow or ideas run out.
This encourages pupils to persist, test new strategies and support each other through difficulties.
That persistence is a key ingredient of resilience.
4. Learning to Reflect and Improve
After each task, pupils often discuss what worked, what didn’t and how they might approach the challenge differently next time.
This reflective process helps them develop the metacognitive skills that research links to successful learning – thinking about their own thinking and adjusting their strategies accordingly.
Over time, pupils begin to see setbacks not as failures but as valuable feedback.
5. Supportive Teams Make Challenges Easier
Resilience is rarely built alone. Supportive relationships play a major role in helping young people navigate challenges.
Because Taskmaster Club is team-based, pupils face difficulties together. They share ideas, encourage one another and celebrate successes collectively.
This collaborative environment helps pupils feel safe taking risks and trying new approaches.
Why Resilience Matters
Resilience helps pupils approach learning with confidence and determination.
When young people develop resilience, they are more likely to:
- persevere through challenging work
- cope with mistakes and setbacks
- adapt when situations change
- maintain motivation and engagement
- approach problems creatively
These qualities are not only valuable in school but are also essential for navigating an increasingly complex and unpredictable world.
Final Thoughts
At first glance, Taskmaster Club might seem like a series of playful, slightly ridiculous tasks. But beneath the laughter and creativity lies something deeper.
Pupils are learning to try things that might not work.
They are discovering that mistakes are normal.
They are developing the confidence to adapt, rethink and try again.
In short, they are building resilience.
And when young people learn that setbacks are simply part of the journey – rather than the end of it – they gain a skill that will serve them far beyond the classroom.
Taskmaster Club materials:
- Information Pack — https://taskmastereducation.com/sites/default/files/2025-10/TM%20Education%20Information%20Pack.pdf
- Benefits — https://taskmastereducation.com/sites/default/files/club-assets/Taskmaster%20Club%20Benefits.pdf
- FAQs — https://taskmastereducation.com/sites/default/files/club-assets/Taskmaster%20Club%20FAQs.pdf
- Educators talk about the impact Taskmaster Club is having on their learners – Teachers Talk Taskmaster Club
Further posts in the ‘What’s So Good About Taskmaster Club series:
- Teamwork – What’s So Good About Taskmaster Club? TEAMWORK | James Blake-Lobb’s Blog
- Creativity – What’s so good about Taskmaster Club? CREATIVITY | James Blake-Lobb’s Blog
- Oracy – What’s So Good About Taskmaster Club? ORACY | James Blake-Lobb’s Blog
- Problem Solving – WHAT’S SO GOOD ABOUT TASKMASTER CLUB? PROBLEM SOLVING | James Blake-Lobb’s Blog
- Leadership – WHAT’S SO GOOD ABOUT TASKMASTER CLUB? LEADERSHIP | James Blake-Lobb’s Blog
- Self-esteem – What’s So Good About Taskmaster Club? SELF-ESTEEM | James Blake-Lobb’s Blog
- Wellbeing – What’s So Good About Taskmaster Club? WELLBEING | James Blake-Lobb’s Blog
- Belonging – What’s So Good About Taskmaster Club? | James Blake-Lobb’s Blog
- Resilience – What’s So Good About Taskmaster Club? RESILIENCE | James Blake-Lobb’s Blog