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Persistence
Persistence is the ability to stay with a task for a reasonably long period of time. While very young children cannot concentrate on one activity for an hour, there are still measurable differences in the length of time that young children will engage in an activity. A highly motivated child will stay involved for a long period of time, whereas an unmotivated child will give up very easily when not instantly successful. Children learn persistence when they are successful at a challenging task. The art of building persistence is in offering a task that is just challenging enough, but not overwhelming.

Choice of Challenge
Choice of challenge is another characteristic of motivation. Children who experience success in meeting one challenge will become motivated and welcome another. These motivated learners will choose an activity that is slightly difficult for them, but provides an appropriate challenge. Unmotivated children (those who have not experienced early success) will pick something that is very easy and ensures an instant success. The challenge for parents is helping their child find an appropriate challenge while still allowing the choice to be the child's.

Developing Motivation
Newborn infants are born with a tremendous amount of intrinsic motivation. This motivation is aimed toward having some visible effect on the environment. When infants can actually see the results of their actions as a reward, they are motivated to continue those actions. These attempts toward control are limited within the young child and include crying, vocalizations, facial expressions and small body movements.

As infants grow and continue to mature (9-24 months), more voluntary, purposeful movements are possible. This gives them more control of their environment. This wider range of control allows children to feel that they are successful. Success leads to higher self-esteem and feelings of self-worth, which leads to strengthened motivation. This success is not based upon adult standards, but totally upon the child's ability to accomplish the goals that s/he has set out.

By two years of age, children are developing the ability to execute a sequence of events in order to achieve a goal. They also have an appreciation for standards and begin to evaluate their efforts. By three years of age, children become interested in doing things well, as opposed to just doing them. They have an idea of various levels of competency in performance and judge their success by their own internal standards. Therefore they have much less need for adult feedback about the quality of their efforts.

Preschoolers (age 3-5 years) become more involved with verbal problem solving skills. They direct their own learning through speech and use vocal communication to direct their own behavior to solve problems. Young children are often heard talking amongst themselves through a series of actions that lead to the solution of a problem. As children get older, this "talking out loud" become an internal monologue. This newly developed ability to problem solve is the basis for motivation at this stage. Having the self confidence to know that one can solve a problem motivates the learner to accept other new and challenging situations, which in turn lead to greater learning.

The world through a child's eyes is an awesome place. Allow children to explore and discover their world. Around every corner is an experience just waiting to surprise and excite young growing minds; all they need is a small amount of direction and a large amount of freedom. It is not necessary to praise and reward children for their own actions as they attempt to control their environment. The feelings of accomplishment they gain from results of those actions will be reward enough. Remember, the habits and attitudes toward learning that are formed in these early years set the mood for all future learning.

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About the Sindh Education Foundation
The Sindh Education Foundation, a technical partner of the Releasing Confidence & Creativity: An Early Childhood Development Programme, releases various publications to stimulate a meaningful discourse on the theories and practices of educational and developmental efforts.
Click here to visit SEF's official website: http://www.sef.org.pk