Habit of Mind: Persistence

It took persistence.
It took persistence.
A delivery from Ikea offers the opportunity to test out our word of the week, "Persistence."
A delivery from Ikea offers the opportunity to test out our word of the week, “Persistence.”

All year we have been talking about what it takes to be productive in school. More recently, we decided to focus on the idea of persistence. Is persistence necessary to be productive? Is persistence necessary in order to learn? Does persistence lead to prideful experiences? We decided to begin to notice when we are persistent. The list that follows is a snapshot of recent persistent moments.

We have one photo to illustrate the concept of persistence – it is of Gus building a bench. When Gus noticed an unopened box from Ikea in our classroom one morning, he begged to open it. A few hours later, a red bench was made…by Gus. It took a few tries and some false starts but Gus persisted and now we have three new popular jobs on our job chart, “Bench Warmers.” Thanks Gus!

Other equally significant examples from students:

I was persistent when:

I did my homework.
I worked hard on my Asch building poem.
I worked on Really Red in Tech.
I did four pages of math for homework.
I was in art making a newsie out of clay.
I was making a Valentines Day card for my little buddy. It took me two tries.”
I read a lot.
I made a sketch (of a scene from the Lower East Side).
I did the math challenge.
I did extra work that was due on other days.
I worked on the tenement building in shop.
I played “Close to 1000” in math.
I turned in my homework every day this week.
I got to school a little early.
I did Charissa’s homework.
I was doing math. There was a way I couldn’t figure out but I kept on trying and got it!

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About Mark Silberberg

Mark is thrilled to be a member of LREI's vibrant learning community and is inspired each day by students and colleagues alike. Mark began his formal adult life in schools as a teacher of physics, chemistry, English and an experiential business simulation class in the public schools where he also worked as a school administrator and technology coordinator. For the ten years prior to coming to LREI, Mark was a co-founder and co-director of a progressive K-12 public charter school. When not immersed in things LREI, Mark enjoys spending time with his family and completing sundry home repair projects. He is an avid soccer player and skier and wishes he had more time to play the guitar and bass.

One thought on “Habit of Mind: Persistence

  1. Good work fourth graders. What should we focus on next? I am thinking about ideas like:
    – striving for accuracy or
    – listening with understanding and empathy.

    What do you think? I can’t wait to talk to you all about this next week.

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