Teaching Children to Value What They Have
March 13th, 2025
When I was 12, there was a bike that most kids coveted: a Schwinn Varsity. They came in typical 70s colors: bright green and red, powder blue, gold, and had—wait for it—10 speeds. One of my friends was the first of our gang to get one, and we were all jealous. Until the day we decided to ride our bikes to the top of a parking garage and race to the bottom. Of course, we wore no helmets—they were just not a thing back then. My friend won the race, and then, well, tragedy. He crashed his brand-new bike. His pride was hurt, but he was fine, and he was very upset his new bike was damaged. Did his parents fix his bike for him or buy him a new one? No. My friend had to push the derailer back into place, reset the handlebars, and live with the scratches on his beloved bike.
I came from a middle-class neighborhood, and my friends and I had what we needed but did not have excessive possessions. Once we got things, we tended to keep them. We learned how to oil and break in our baseball gloves and truly valued them once they were good and used. We shaped our street hockey sticks to the perfect angle to ensure a wicked slap shot; a brand-new hockey stick was of limited value. Model trains were passed down from an older to a younger sibling. These were just the norms of my time.
In our age of consumption and abundance, where objects are often not made to last, we develop a very transitory and transactional relationship with things. If objects break, we throw them out. We get used to materials that feel cheap and often function poorly. Children, because they are so impressionable, internalize these norms and can develop an unhealthy relationship with their possessions.
Accordingly, it can be beneficial to teach children how to make things last, to fix things instead of throwing them out, and to lovingly care for a treasured object in the hope it will last a very long time. These activities all reinforce positive values such as sustainability, responsibility, and initiative. When we take the next step and teach children how to make things themselves, they acquire even greater skills and confidence, and these can be great activities for parents and children to do together.
More News from Charlotte Prep
Feb20A Big Question from a Small Child
It was just before our holiday break in December, and I was walking by the Early School playground to get lunch. As often happens, a group of students gathered to talk with me. At one point a student came over to the fence and asked, “Mr. Marblo, are you real?”
See DetailsJan30Our Commitment to Diversity
The news is filled with accounts of universities, corporations, and other organizations scaling back or eliminating their diversity programs. While the implementation of these programs and policies can be challenging, I find this retreat from DEIB work to be short-sighted and reactive. Let me be clear: our school’s commitment to diversity is unwavering.
See DetailsJan8The Architecture of Learning
Unlike the construction of a new building, learning is recursive – it ebbs and flows, moves forward and circles back, and often does not follow a straight line.
See DetailsDec11Let Your Child's Humor Shine
The other day I was walking past the early school playground and a student said “Hello Mr...”—and then nothing. She clearly forgot my name. A few seconds later, she said, “Hi Bob!” Then she giggled.
See Details