Never Give Up
("Perseverance" for 3rd Grade)

PURPOSE: By the end of this session, I want my students to realize their need to persevere during difficult times.   

Materials Needed: For object lesson: roll of large paper and tape, a super ball (small, hard rubber ball) three raw eggs, two Tootsie Rolls (or appropriate prizes). 

For more materials, see also the "Intercom Insights, Quotes..." for this trait, as well as the related traits: Diligence, Work Ethic, Endurance, and Overcoming Failure.  

Hint: Before looking at my ideas, think about illustrations from your own life. Are there hard knocks or failures that you've had to endure to get to where you are now? Remember, students may respect you for your successes, but they love you when you're vulnerable about your failures and hard times. Our purpose is to reach students who are discouraged and close to giving up. Your own failures and setbacks can help them identify with you.

Introduction

Today we're talking about perseverance. We'll tell some interesting stories, and do a pretty wild activity. But I hope it will be more than fun. I think it could change our lives. 

Definition: Let's first of all define perseverance. What do you think "perseverance" means? (Put their ideas on the board and draw from them to come up with something like: "Not giving up when the going gets tough.")

Reflection: What are some of the greatest difficulties you face? (Teacher: Here's your chance to share some of your hard times and setbacks, in order to get them to open up.)

Transition: All of us face hard times. It's how we deal with these hard times that separate the successful from losers. So let's talk about how to handle our hard times by bouncing back from your failures.

To illustrate this point, I want to give you a test. (Options: Use as either handout or overhead or Powerpoint.) As I read the statements about each person (these are all real people), I want you to decide whether you think the person was a success or failure in his field. Write either the letter "F" for failure, or "S" for success before each one. (Hint: If you copy and paste this into your word processing program for copying onto paper, you might want to change the font to something more "youthy," like "Andy".)

SUCCESS OR FAILURE?

____ Politician: Ran for political office seven times and was defeated each time.

____ Cartoonist: All he wanted to do was to sketch cartoons. He applied with a Kansas City newspaper. The editor said, "It’s easy to see from these sketches that you have no talent." No studio would give him a job. He ended up doing publicity work for a church in an old, dilapidated garage.

____ Writer: His first children’s book was rejected by 23 publishers.

____ Inventor: In the first year of marketing his new soft drink, he sold only 400 bottles.

____ Actor: He went to Hollywood as an 18 year old, and after a couple of parts was unemployed for two years. As he ran out of money, he sold off his sectional couch, one section at a time, and lived on macaroni. He had no phone. His office was a phone booth at Pioneer Chicken.

____ Athlete: As a baseball player, he struck out more than any player in the history of baseball: 1,330 times.

____ Politician: Flunked the sixth grade. As a sixteen-year-old in Paris, a teacher had written on his report card, "Shows a conspicuous lack of success." He wished to become a military leader, or a great statesman. As a student, he failed three times in his exams to enter the British Military Academy.

____ Athlete: As a high school student, he felt so unpopular with the girls that he thought he might never be able to find a wife. That's why he took a cooking class. He thought he might never have anyone to cook for him. 

The answers to the test? Whether you answered success or failure, you all made a 100%! Each of these people were both failures and successes. 

Let’s look at these people, one by one.

HINT: By getting some interaction, you keep students involved. Allow several to guess who each story is about. They like to be involved.
Object Lesson Preparation: I like to use object lessons, since they involve more senses than a verbal illustration. They won't soon be forgotten. 

Materials Needed: 

* Roll of wide paper
* Tape 
* Three "super balls" (check especially gumball machines outside Walmart)
* Three raw eggs
* Two Tootsie Rolls (or other prize)

Tape a very large section of paper to the wall. Extend the paper on the floor to catch the broken egg. Draw a set of concentric circles on the wall paper, making a target. 

Without explaining the point of the illustration, get six volunteers. The first three take the super ball and throw it at the target, trying to get the closest to the center. Give the prize to the winner. The second three throw the raw eggs. Give the prize to the winner. Then, proceed to explain the object lesson as I have it written out to the left. (NOTE: Inevitably, an attention seeker may throw the egg outside of the paper on purpose, acting like it was a mistake. Don't let it frazzle you! Calmly reassure him that not everyone has good aim and assign him clean-up duty.)

Object Lesson Introduction: When I reflect on these people who refused to let their failures make them quit, I think of the difference between a super ball and a raw egg. (A super ball is one of those very hard rubber balls that bounce so high.) If you take a super ball and throw it against the wall, what happens to it? (It bounces back.) What happens the harder you throw it against the wall? (The faster it bounces back.) What happens to a raw egg when you throw it against a wall? (It splatters.) What happens the harder you throw it against the wall? (The worse it splatters.)

This defines two types of people: raw egg people and super ball people. When raw egg people hit an obstacle, what happens to them? (They splatter. The harder they hit, the harder they splatter, giving up on their goal.) When super ball people hit an obstacle, what do they do? (They bounce back. The harder they hit, the harder they bounce back.) 

Discussion: The people we just talked about were super ball people. With every failure, they kept bouncing back. Why do you think they kept bouncing back, whereas many people would have given up? (Allow a few minutes.)

Now, share with the class your thoughts. Tell about how perseverance has been important in your own life. (Answers may include: #1 - Their goals were extremely important to them. Some of our goals aren't really that important to us, so we give up easily. #2 - They may have had tenacious, stubborn personalities. #3 - Perhaps they had enough successes in their lives to balance out their failures. #4 - They believed in themselves in spite of their failures.) 

I want to leave this discussion emphasizing that their goals were extremely important to them. Do have some goals that are worth enduring for? 

Perseverance - you’ll never be successful without it. Do some of you feel the need for more of it in your own life? Perhaps academic work doesn’t come easy for you. Perhaps your home life is in shambles and beneath your cool expression you’re wondering if you’ll ever make it in life. 


Action Points

Think about a couple of areas of your life in which you feel that you have need of endurance. It may be a class that you just don’t get. Maybe it’s a family problem that you came in this morning ready to give up on, but now you think you should hang in there. 

Conclusion

There are two things I want you to come out of this session with (Put these on the board.):


1) Don’t be discouraged by your failures. Remember, the road to success is paved with failures.

2) In order to succeed in life, you’ve got to endure.

I’ll leave you with the words of Winston Churchill, the one who had written on his report card, "shows a conspicuous lack of success," the one who failed the test three times to enter the British military academy, but the one who became one of the greatest men of the 20th century. One day he was invited back to his old school to give the commencement address. This great, eloquent man stood before them and said simply this:

HINT: Say these three sentences slowly, deliberately. Look at your students in their eyes. This is your final challenge to them.

"Never give up. Never give up. Never, never, never give up."

And then he sat down. Thank you. (If you're a guest speaker, go sit down.)

[Copyright January, 2008, by Legacy Educational Resources. All rights reserved. Copies can be made within your own class (individual subscription) or school (school subscription) or system (school system subscription) free of charge. Not for resale.]