Embracing Failure: A Crucial Step in Childhood Development

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More is learned from failure than from success. Kids need to experience failure because, it helps them work harder for what they want to achieve life, failure helps them become stronger in real life problems, failure also can teach kids to be thoughtful winners and respectable losers and to never take winning for granted. Winning and losing in sports is very important as well, If you don’t have a winner and a loser in a game the loser will never know what they are doing wrong and how to fix it.
Failure help kids work harder for what they want to achieve in life.When kids lose in whatever they are doing whether it is a spelling bee, soccer game or a dance recital they will learn from what they did wrong and work harder to do better next time.
When kids win a game or many games they can get to confident and become mean and cocky winners, but if kids experience a loss, they can get an understanding for the other team or player. In the article, why we need to let kids fail the author states that kids have a habit of being more fearful to failure and less willing to try new things because they don 't know how they will handle it (Why We Need to Let Children Fail). According to Ashley Merryman, When kids make mistakes in a game, parents and coaches should not twist those losses into decorated wins. Instead, they should be helping the kids overcome those losses, to help them see that getting better over time is more imperative than a win or loss, and to help them kindly congratulate the child or team that thrived when they failed (Merryman). As Dyan Williams stated in her article, “Thomas Edison failed over 6,000 times before perfecting the first electrical lightbulb. Michael Jordan was cut from his high school basketball team and missed over 9,000 shots in his career. Oprah Winphrey was fired from an early anchor spot and deemed “unfit for TV."” (Dyan Williams). A failure that results from well-made and goodhearted experimentation can be a

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