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Student Wellbeing

Growing Resilience in Children

Resilience is one of the most valuable skills a child can develop. It’s the ability to cope with challenges, adapt to change, and bounce back after setbacks. In a world that can feel fast paced and unpredictable, resilience gives children the confidence to face difficulties with courage and optimism.

 

What is resilience?

 

Resilience isn’t about “toughing it out” or pretending everything is fine. It’s about learning how to manage emotions, solve problems, and keep going even when things feel hard. Children build resilience over time, through supportive relationships and everyday experiences that help them grow.

 

Why resilience matters

 

Developing resilience helps children:

 

  • Build emotional wellbeing they learn to manage frustration, disappointment, and stress.

  • Grow confidence each challenge overcome strengthens their belief in their own abilities.

  • Develop independence they learn to try, adjust, and try again.

  • Prepare for life friendships, schoolwork, and family life all involve challenges; resilience helps them navigate these moments with greater ease.

 

How children learn resilience

 

Children aren’t born resilient — they learn it through:

 

  • Strong, supportive relationships with adults who listen and validate their feelings.

  • Opportunities to solve problems rather than having adults’ step in too quickly.

  • Experiences with manageable challenges that stretch their skills without overwhelming them.

  • Positive role modelling from adults who show healthy ways of coping with stress.

How Families Can Nurture Resilience

 

Encourage a growth mindset

Help children see mistakes as part of learning. Phrases like “What could we try next?” or “You worked really hard on that” shift the focus from perfection to effort.

 

Acknowledge and validate emotions

Let children know it’s okay to feel upset, worried, or frustrated. Naming emotions helps them understand and manage them.

 

Teach problem solving

Guide children through simple steps:

 

  • What’s the problem?

  • What are some possible solutions?

  • What might happen with each one?

  • Which will you try first?

 

Build emotional regulation skills

Breathing exercises, movement breaks, mindfulness, or quiet time can help children calm their bodies and minds when they feel overwhelmed.

 

Strengthen connections

Children who feel connected to family, teachers, and peers are more willing to take healthy risks and bounce back from challenges.

 

Celebrate effort

Recognising persistence, “You kept going even when it was tricky” reinforces resilience far more than praising outcomes alone.

 

Create routines and predictability

Consistent routines help children feel secure, making it easier for them to cope with change when it happens.

 

Resilience grows in small, everyday moments a challenge attempted, a feeling expressed, a problem solved. When children know they are supported, capable, and safe to try again, they develop the confidence to face whatever comes next.