When friends and acquaintances learn I work as a preschool teacher, they often smile. They say, āYou must have so much patience.ā I usually just shrug. I don’t think patience is the most essential quality when working with young children. In fact, Iām not a fan of patience. Iām all for understanding.
Take four-year-old James. He is a sturdy redheaded boy. He just decided who gets to ride the scooter by pushing a three-year-old girl off it. Does Jamesās behaviour require patience? Is patience what I need, as his teacher, to handle the situation thoughtfully and effectively? What does being āpatientā even mean?

According to most English dictionaries, patience is āthe capacity to accept or tolerate delay, trouble, or suffering without getting angry or upset.ā The underlying assumption? Youāre enduring something unpleasant.
Patience is often seen as a hallmark of good educators. āKate, I could never do what you doāI donāt have the patience.ā āYou must be incredibly patient to work with kids every day.ā Compliments like that used to make me smile, but lately theyāve started to rub me the wrong way. Probably because Iāve never considered myself particularly patient. Sure, I can sit through a dental appointment in silence, give blood without flinchingābut to put up with work that drains me or feels meaningless? No, thank you.
Patience is usually framed as a virtue. It conjures images of someone calm, humble, quietly enduring something difficult. You grit your teeth, take a deep breath, and get through it. Why? Because āpatience is a virtue.ā Because āgood things come to those who wait.ā Because āhard work and patience conquer all.ā These sayings run deep in our cultural wiring.
But I donāt think early childhood educators, nannies, or parents of young children should rely too heavily on patience. Why? Because if you’re constantly āputting up withā children, it probably means youāre not enjoying the work. It suggests youāre not in a state of flow, as described by psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi. And thatās a problem. Because it means youāre disconnected.
An educator who truly understands a childās developmental stageātheir strengths, their challengesāwonāt suffer silently. Take James again. His behaviour might look aggressive, but developmentally, itās not out of the ordinary. Iām not about to label him a ātroublemakerā or say heās violent. Heās a great kidāhe just doesnāt yet know how to behave differently. Maybe he struggles with self-regulation. Maybe he needs support from a psychologist. Either way, the incident (yes, James pushed someone again) becomes an opportunity to teach, not punish.
At this stage of development, James only knows how to express himself through force. My job is to help him find another way. That doesnāt require me to clench my fists or count to tenāit simply means I remind him, gently and clearly, that we donāt hit people. We use our words. James isnāt distracting me from my workāhe is my work. He gives me a reason to model better ways of interacting.
And itās not just James. Thereās Zoya, who loves pulling hair and biting. Thereās Ruben. He is autistic and sometimes throws sticks from the top of the slide. This behavior is not out of malice. He doesnāt yet grasp the consequences of his actions.
If I relied solely on patience, Iād burn out by the end of the first week. By the end of the month, Iād be yelling and reacting poorly. What I need far more than patience is understanding. And that understanding comes from developmental theory, from knowing childrenās capabilities and limitsāand from genuinely wanting to be around them.
Patience has a limit. Thereās a reason we say, āBeware the wrath of the patient person.ā But understanding, compassion, and connection? Theyāre renewable.
Teachers and parents who expect three- to five-year-olds to sit quietly on a mat or at a desk? They do need patienceābecause they lack understanding. Itās almost comical to watch an educator sternly tell a child “for the last time” to take a pencil out of their mouth. They clearly forget what itās like to be teething and want to chew everything.
Expectations that arenāt age-appropriate only create tension between adults and children. If I know a childās gums are itchy, Iāll offer a teething toy or some crunchy toast. My voice and body language stay calmānot because Iām forcing patience, but because I get it. When you understand, thereās nothing to endure.
Treating young childrenās behaviour as something to be enduredālike a headache or a traffic jamāturns it into something threatening. āYouāre doing this just to upset your mum!ā āJohnny, did you pee your pants on purpose?ā Many of us still remember those hurtful lines from our own childhoods. We recall how wrong they were. We also remember how much they shamed us.
But harshness and rejection often come from a simple lack of understanding. When adults take time to really listenānot just to what children say, but to what they meanāthey create space for growth. When I understand a child, I respond to them as they areānot as I wish they were. I donāt waste energy fighting the fact that children are, well, children. I use my energy to guide them.
And that, to me, is far more powerful than patience.
Let me know what you think!
Kate