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4 Ways To Instill Courage, Persistence, and the Will to Achieve In Our Children

4 Ways To Instill Courage, Persistence, and the Will to Achieve In Our Children

Yaiqab Saint · Thursday, April 25th 2013 at 10:01PM · 822 views
by Kara Stevens | on April 24th, 2013 |
Black and Married With Kids.com
A Positive Image of Marriage and Family

What I loved about being a classroom teacher was that I could teach beautiful brown girls and boys that looked like me some of the habits of success and life skills that served me well in my pursuit of love, happiness, and personal fulfillment. Earlier this week, as an administrator, I had to support the proctoring of some serious high-stakes State exams. And for some of these little brown children, it was their first big exam.

Many of the students complained, “This test is too long.” “This is too hard.” Some, all of sudden, needed to use the bathroom or drink water. And when their anxiety and frustration levels became too overwhelming, several shut down completely —chucking their test booklets and pencils onto the floor.

Seeing our children ill-equipped to handle this pressure coupled with the fact that their lives will be full of challenges and obstacles—the State exams just being one of them— I began thinking about simple strategies that we could do at home to educate and train our children to be courageous, persistent, and poised for personal success.

Help our children identity and express what brings them frustration

When it comes to completing assignments, tasks, or any other activities out of their comfort zones, some of our kids may make blanket statements like, “ I cannot do this.” It is our responsibility to dig a little deeper for clarity. Ask questions like, “ Well, what part of it is making you frustrated?” “Why don’t you walk me through the whole problem so we can see where you actually got stuck?” You may find that out of 10 steps, your child may understand steps 1-8, and gets stuck at Step 9. You may find that one word is marring comprehension.

Teach them self-regulating strategies that will help them persevere

World-class athletes, musicians, and leaders all rely on techniques and strategies to keep them calm and focused in the face of pressure and the need to perform. Allow them to explore techniques and strategies that get them in the “zone” and empower them to rely on them whenever they need. This may include deep breathing, meditation, humming the lyrics to a particularly meaningful song, stretching, or prayer.

Express how you handle difficult projects or assignments

Our children often keep their frustrations and challenges to themselves because they are afraid that they are the only ones experiencing it. As your children’s first role models, it is important that you give them a realistic take on what it is like to be an adult; challenges, fears, and frustrations just don’t go away after you turn twenty-one. Share the types of strategies that you use to overcome your obstacles. They will be relieved to know that their heroes have fears and have special ways to overcome them.

Read them literature that highlights and celebrates children that persist and endure in the face of self-doubt

One of my favorite children’s books is The Dot by Peter Reynolds. I read and reread this book to my third grade students because it shows how personal transformation comes from perseverance and community support. This book is also on my personal bookshelf, which I refer to when I feel like a failure or particularly discouraged. For older children, identity biographies and autobiographies of public figures that they respect. Biographies and autobiographies, by nature, inform and inspire readers because they tell how a person had to overcome both internal and external obstacles in order to succeed.

BMWK—How are you preparing your children to be courageous and persistent? What strategies and techniques do you use to keep yourself focused and calm when the pressure is on? Have you shared them with your little brown ones?





About the author

Kara is a motivational speaker, life coach, and founder of the personal finance and lifestyle blog FabulousNFrugal . Connect with her on Twitter: @fabandfrugal and join her Facebook



About the Author

Yaiqab Saint Nassau County- Long Island (Strong Isl ), NY

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Comments (5)

Harry Watley Friday, April 26th 2013 at 9:09AM

I think that the most important thing to teach a child is integrity. With out integrity the child can grow up to be just like you. You have no integrity.

You won't admit to plantation slavery because your belief that we are descendents of the Jewish chased into Africa in 70 AD. The wrong person to be dishonest with is yourself.

Yaiqab Saint Friday, April 26th 2013 at 11:33AM

@Harry
Do the research and come back to me with the correct answer.
Integrity is to find yourself reproof, it's one of the primary criteria of having integrity.

Yaiqab Saint Friday, April 26th 2013 at 11:42AM

To All back on Subject Matter:

I agree with the authors comments and would like to add my own.

The best teaching moment is by experience..... if you as an parent find yourself 'reproof' with a good spirit then your kids tend to duplicate success. In otherwords "success breeds success." From day one Saint and Janelle have been reading to "Baby Gurl" and we expect academic superiority from her and all of our future kids. Mommy is smart and so is Daddy and we expect nothing less!

Motivation starts from birth and parents needs to set the correct environment for those abilities to foster and grow.

Parents are guides..... just don't talk the talk... walk it.

"Baby Gurl" is going to be great because her parents are Great and "WE" will assist her to be great that is how it works!

Jen Fad Sunday, April 28th 2013 at 11:10AM

The better thing would be to expose children to the same type of formatting in daily class room tests so that the material won't look foreign. Prepping children through structured curriculum designed in line with State testing objectives in mind is probably the better route!

At least that's what I see being done in the school where my child attends.


Jen Fad Sunday, April 28th 2013 at 11:12AM

@Saint,

..."The best teaching moment is by experience..... if you as an parent find yourself 'reproof' with a good spirit then your kids tend to duplicate success. In otherwords "success breeds success."...

I agree. My child sees me enthusiastic regarding school, the library, job, homework, ect,...
He's learning through example and life experience to appreciate these things early.

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