Professor Claxton told the Daily Telegraph: “The eraser is an instrument of the devil because it perpetuates a culture of shame about error.
“It’s a way of lying to the world, which says ‘I didn’t make a mistake. I got it right first time.’ That’s what happens when you can rub it out and replace it.”
He called for a culture in which children are “not afraid” to make errors, and said that they should be constantly reflecting and improving on what they have already achieved – rather than being trained to get the right answer as quickly as possible.
And he said that learning should be centred around the “process” of getting the right answer – because that’s what real life is really like.
“Ban the eraser, get a big road sign with an eraser and put a big, red bar across it and get kids to say you don’t scrub out your mistakes,” he added.
This article was originally published in the Independent.