How can we help kids develop persistence and grit? Our top ten promising practices:
Start with ourselves! Ask yourself, how gritty am I?:
Test yourself on Angela Duckworth’s grit scale. Taking time to think about the role that grit has played in your life can also help you support early grit development in your kids.
Let kids drive their own play.
If kids can have lots of space and time to take play in any direction, they’ll be much more likely to identify and hone their interests—and interests are seeds that sprout true passions.
Let creatures be teachers.
In Tinkergarten lessons, kids learn all kinds of lessons by observing and pretending to be other living things. The natural world is full of examples of species who have evolved unique ways to persist and, in turn, thrive.
Provide activities designed to promote persistence—Come to Tinkergarten!
Our Winter 2024 curriculum series is engineered specifically to help kids develop persistence and grit. Each weekly lesson features a different "animal superhero" and supports kids ages 1.5 to 8 in working on a unique aspect of persistence. Learn more about all we'll be learning.
Families can complete the curriculum on their own using Tinkergarten Home. Or, in hundreds of communities, families can join local classes facilitated by a Tinkergarten Teacher. See if there are groups near you in our TG Teacher Directory.
And, teachers can teach the curriculum in their classrooms, communities, homeschooling practices and more. Learn more here.
Surround kids with tales of persistence.
Stories of creatures and people who model the persistence process also help kids understand and learn to persist. Check out "How to Nurture Kids' Grit with Great Books" for a list of our favorite titles.
Promote pretend play in particular.
What does pretending have to do with persistence and grit? When kids pretend, they develop cognitive flexibility—the ability to bend the rules, imagine new worlds and substitute one idea for another. Part of working your way around obstacles in life is thinking and acting flexibly. So, pretending can actually help kids prepare.
Reframe problems as “desirable difficulties.”
It’s hard to watch our children suffer or experience frustration, but it’s helpful to ask ourselves, “When is frustration really suffering, and when is it a means to learn?” When you ask that question, you can start to spot “desirable difficulties”—a concept developed by Robert and Elizabeth Bjork at UCLA and made popular in Malcolm Gladwell’s book, David and Goliath.
According to the Bjorks' research, when a task is made easier, it does not result in more learning. Rather, when learners experience an appropriate level of challenge, they “turn on.” The challenge becomes a way to get better at the task at hand and to learn to be both flexible and, you guessed it, gritty.
Trust kids to tell you what’s too challenging.
Young children are rather good at knowing when too much is too much. But a little frustration is good practice for life. So let them give challenge a try. For example, if your child decides to try to drag a log four times her size, let her go for it. Through persisting a bit, she’ll learn a thing or two about physics as well as her own limits. If you encourage her not to try, she’ll only learn that you don’t believe she can do it. If she gets stuck or appears sad when thwarted, you can always suggest she try again when she is taller or stronger, or you can offer to team up and see what happens together.
Notice and honor effort.
Think about how you praise, and look for every opportunity to value effort over achievement (avoid praising talent or “smarts”). When you see a child put real effort into something, especially if they struggle and persist, describe the child’s actions to them and stress the learning. For example, “I saw that your stone tower kept falling over, but you switched the blocks and kept going. What did you learn about building towers from all of those falls?”
Practice grit and let your kids see.
One of the most powerful ways to nurture grit in our children is to model it ourselves. Identify a pursuit that you really love and at which you can always get better. Maybe it's baking bread, tending to plants, playing an instrument or teaching a particular skill that you find really interesting but also find challenging.
Share with the kids you love or teach how you love your passion task as well as ways you find it challenging. Teach grit when you hit a challenge by talking about it with kids in terms of what you've learned and what you think you'll try instead next time.