When marked work comes home, what happens next matters more than the grade. The Education Endowment Foundation rates feedback as one of the highest-impact interventions in education — but only when students understand and act on it. Each Learning Genius type receives feedback in a characteristic way that determines whether it ever becomes genuinely useful.
Why feedback response varies by learner type
The nine Learning Genius types across the Action, Heart, and Thinking streams are not just different in how they study — they differ in how they interpret evaluation. For some types, a low mark is a call to action. For others it is a source of shame. For others it provokes argument. Understanding your child's characteristic response to marked work allows you to create the conditions where the feedback becomes genuinely developmental, regardless of the grade.
The EEF's evidence on feedback is clear: feedback that improves learning must be specific, acted on quickly, and understood by the student. The most common reason feedback fails is not that the teacher wrote the wrong thing — it is that the student did not process it in a way that led to change.
How Action-stream learners respond to feedback
Bold Bear: Bold Bears tend to look at the mark first and the comments last — or not at all. If the mark is good, the work feels done; if the mark is disappointing, their first response may be frustration or dismissal ("the marking was unfair"). The parent's role is to redirect their goal-orientation toward the feedback itself: "if you want a higher score next time, the comments are the map." Framing the teacher's corrections as a challenge to beat, rather than a verdict to accept, suits the Bold Bear's instinct.
Rapid Cheetah: Rapid Cheetahs receive feedback with initial enthusiasm and then move on before applying it. They may read every comment and agree with it in the moment, but without a prompt to act on it soon, the insight fades as they move to the next thing. The most useful parent intervention is to ask them, within 24 hours of getting work back: "what is the one thing you are going to do differently next time?" One concrete commitment, spoken aloud, is far more durable than good intentions.
Sparky Fox: Sparky Foxes respond well to feedback that reframes a weakness as an interesting problem to solve. Dry corrections ("your evidence is insufficient") disengage them; a question that opens up the problem ("what if you had included a second piece of evidence here — what might have worked?") activates their curiosity. They also respond well to specific positive feedback: knowing precisely what worked well gives them a creative anchor to build from.
| Type | Feedback instinct | Most effective parent response |
|---|---|---|
| Bold Bear | Marks first; dismisses critical comments | Frame corrections as a challenge to beat |
| Rapid Cheetah | Initial enthusiasm; quickly moves on | Prompt one specific commitment within 24 hours |
| Sparky Fox | Disengages from dry correction | Reframe as an interesting problem; highlight what worked |
How Heart-stream learners respond to feedback
Social Dolphin: Social Dolphins are strongly influenced by the emotional tone of feedback. A warm, encouraging comment alongside a correction helps them receive the correction; cold or purely critical feedback can shut them down for the rest of the session. They also process feedback better in conversation than in isolation — talking through the teacher's comments with a parent ("what do you think they meant by this?") converts written marks into usable information.
Chill Panda: Chill Pandas receive negative feedback quietly and may appear to accept it without distress. The risk is that they internalise it passively rather than acting on it: they register the disappointment but do not convert it into a plan. A parent should prompt gentle action: "let's look at the comments together and make one note about what to focus on next time." The act of writing the response — however brief — moves feedback from passive receipt to active intention.
Creative Peacock: Creative Peacocks are the most vulnerable to feedback in the whole framework, particularly on work they have invested significant emotional energy in. A low mark or dismissive comment on a piece they cared about can feel disproportionately painful and may trigger significant disengagement. Two things help: first, acknowledging the effort and the quality of what they produced before moving to the feedback ("I can see you worked hard on this — what did the teacher say?"); second, separating the work's quality from the grade, because Creative Peacocks often conflate them.
How Thinking-stream learners respond to feedback
Deep Owl: Deep Owls take feedback very seriously and often analyse it more thoroughly than any other type. Their risk is counter-productive perfectionism: they may spend so long understanding every comment that they lose sight of the broader picture. They may also become despondent when feedback reveals a gap they did not know existed, because it disrupts their sense of having understood the topic fully. Reassure them that gaps are information, not failures — then help them build a specific plan for addressing the gap.
Steady Wolf: Steady Wolves respond well to clear, specific, actionable feedback and may struggle with vague or inconsistent marking. "Could develop further" without more specificity is frustrating for a type that prefers knowing exactly what to do. Teach them to ask the teacher a follow-up question when the feedback is unclear: "I wasn't sure what 'develop further' meant in this context — could you show me an example?" Most teachers respect this approach, and Steady Wolves deliver it without the emotional intensity that can make similar questions feel challenging from other types.
Sharp Eagle: Sharp Eagles often agree with accurate feedback and disagree sharply with feedback they consider inaccurate. They may argue — at least internally, sometimes openly — with a teacher's mark if they believe it is wrong. This is not always inappropriate (mark schemes can be misapplied), but it can become an obstacle to learning if it is the default response to any uncomfortable feedback. Teach them to ask: "even if I think this feedback is partially wrong, is there any part of it that is right?" Finding the valid core in unwelcome feedback is a high-order skill that Sharp Eagles are well placed to develop.
A practical feedback review routine for each type
Regardless of type, the following sequence — adapted to each type's instincts — converts marked work from an event into a learning tool:
- Read the mark and acknowledge it (aim for a neutral response, whatever the grade).
- Read every comment before deciding what they mean.
- Identify the single most important improvement the feedback is pointing to.
- Write one specific sentence beginning "next time I will…" beside that comment.
- Return to the work within one week with a chance to apply the improvement (either in a new piece or in a revision activity targeting the same skill).
| Learner type | Step most likely to be skipped | Specific support needed |
|---|---|---|
| Bold Bear | Step 2 (reading comments) | Must read before discussing |
| Rapid Cheetah | Step 5 (returning to apply) | Set a diary reminder for the follow-up |
| Sparky Fox | Step 4 (writing the commitment) | Can be spoken aloud instead of written |
| Social Dolphin | Step 3 (identifying importance) | Talk through with parent first |
| Chill Panda | Step 5 (returning to apply) | Build the follow-up into the next study session explicitly |
| Creative Peacock | Step 1 (neutral acknowledgement) | Acknowledge effort before starting the review |
| Deep Owl | Step 3 (single improvement) | Resist reviewing all comments simultaneously |
| Steady Wolf | Step 3 when feedback is vague | Ask teacher for clarification before step 4 |
| Sharp Eagle | Step 3 when they disagree | Find the valid core before writing the commitment |
Frequently asked questions
My child gets their work back and immediately hides it. How do I help?
This is most common in Creative Peacock learners (who fear judgement on work they cared about) and in Bold Bears (who dislike visible evidence of underperformance). The first step is to establish a household norm where getting work back is a normal event, not a high-stakes reveal. Reviewing work together without leading with "what did you get?" reduces the social pressure. Over time, the habit of reviewing without drama makes the feedback a technical process rather than an emotional event.
My child's teacher writes very brief comments. How useful are they for different types?
Brief comments ("good", "needs more detail") are genuinely less useful for Steady Wolf and Deep Owl types, who benefit from specific, actionable guidance. They can, however, be useful for Action-stream types, who may respond better to less direction. If the comments are consistently insufficient for your child's type, it is worth asking the school about the marking policy. Many schools offer more detailed feedback upon request, particularly for assessment pieces.
Should I look at my child's marked work, or is that undermining their independence?
This depends on the age and the type. For KS3 students of all types, parental engagement with marked work is generally positive — the EEF evidence notes that when parents understand what their child is working on and what feedback they are receiving, home learning improves. For GCSE students, the engagement might shift to process ("did you read the comments?") rather than content. The independence goal is for them to manage the feedback routine themselves; getting there usually requires parental scaffolding first.
My child does well on most feedback but freezes when they get a bad mark. Is this a type thing?
It can be. Creative Peacock and Deep Owl types are most likely to be significantly affected by unexpectedly poor marks, because both types have high internal standards. Sharp Eagles may be affected if they believe the mark was given in error. The most useful response is a calm, curious approach: "that's not what we expected — let's look at the comments and work out what happened." Turning an unexpected result into an investigation rather than a crisis is a genuinely learnable response.
Discover how AI tutors give personalised, type-sensitive feedback for every Learning Genius learner at aitutors.me.