![]() ![]() In order to persist, students must feel safe in their classroom environment to take risks, make mistakes, think flexibly and even undertake something they have not done before. You will see the need for persistence when students, and adult for that matter, are stuck, when they don’t know what to do. Most important: If your students are not developing persistence in your classroom, possibly the work they are being given is not stretching them. Teach these students to strive for excellence rather than perfection, which is unattainable. Some students want to rework their ideas over and over again, in a search for perfection. However, there are also times students need to know when to stop, when to say enough is enough. Gold medalists will often talk about 10 years of training to get to the top.Īs says, “Be like the postage stamp. Meet with successful people in your community and have students ask questions about the tough times and how they kept going. It is often said, “Persistent people begin their success where others end in failure.” Study people such as Sir Edmund Hillary, first to climb to the top to Mt Everest, sporting heroes, para Olympians or entrepreneurs. For instance, after reading The Tortoise and The Hare, discuss how the tortoise was persistent and how the student shows persistence in other settings, such as home.ġ1. Parallels may be drawn between a character in a book and a student. Assign reflection writing or journaling after a task, activity or day with the question: How did I show I’m persistent today?ġ0. When displaying students’ work that they have persisted at, create a sign that says, “We have been persistent” to show case the development for this Habit of Mind.ĩ. ![]() Persistence awards or ribbons may be given out at assembly.Ĩ. It can simply say “We are persistent,” with names ticked underneath.ħ. Use a simple sticker reward chart to reward every time you catch someone persisting. Find a book on juggling and all start together. A great activity to introduce persistence is to teach your students to juggle, and it’s even better if you don’t know how. It shows Dr Seuss’ workings and changes, as well as his developing thought processes in writing the book.ĥ. A fantastic book that shows the persistence of an author is Dr Seuss’ Hooray For Diffendoofer Day. Allow children to be proud of and display their draft work along side the finished piece of work to show the development and persistence that took place. As a teacher you may hear yourself saying, “who has another way to solve this?” or “What’s another way?” Develop a bank of different strategies and ways to approach a task.Ĥ. The more ways you have to solve a problem, the more likely you are to keep going.ģ. Invite students to make a plan before solving a problem and if plan A does not work, use plan B, C, D or E.Ģ.Teach your students to find at least three ways to solve a problem so they have a backup if one strategy doesn’t work. Give your students a repertoire of problem-solving strategies. Here are some ideas you might model or adapt to develop persistence in your classroom:ġ. Persistence means knowing that getting stuck is a cue to ‘try something else.’” Persistence does not just mean working to get it right. Dr Art Costa, the co-founder of the Habits of Mind, says “teaching persistence is a matter of teaching strategy. It is being able to hang in there and keep going when a task becomes challenging, never giving up and keeping on going.ĭo your students say often say, “It’s too hard,” so they don’t have to think any further? Do they crumple up their paper and say, “I can’t do this,” meaning so I don’t have to do this? These show lack of persistence. Persistence is the ability to stick to a task, especially when the going gets tough.
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