
Mistake-based learning uses failure as a launchpad
New teaching method encourages pupils to acknowledge, analyze and learn from mistakes in class.

New teaching method encourages pupils to acknowledge, analyze and learn from mistakes in class.

It crashed and burned big time, but the well-funded Israeli company that tried a battery-swapping model still managed to blaze a trail for today’s electric vehicle sector.

The Israeli attitude was summed up best in a children’s TV show: ‘Kids, no need to worry; Yatzek always falls and gets back up.’

Disruptive, action-packed social campaign delights viewers around the world while promoting Israeli-style creativity, innovation and persistence.

A key element in the Israeli high-tech success story is accepting failure, learning from mistakes and moving on — a bit wiser for the wear.

So what if their Indiegogo campaign failed to reach its funding goal? The founders of KIQ are moving ahead anyway.