Best-selling author Angela Duckworth says that to achieve success, you not only need talent but also to persevere in something you’re passionate about. It’s a theory she espouses in her book, “Grit”, which hit the top of the New York Times best-seller list in 2016. “I think any teacher will tell you that the ability to persist, the ability to stay with something and not give up on it, is one of the things that all kids need to learn,” Duckworth said in an interview with Cheddar, “no matter rich or poor.” Duckworth, a MacArthur “Genius” grant winner and a TED Talk speaker in 2013, said this mindset is learnable. She believes being a model citizen is one way to pass the skill on to others. “If you’re a CEO or if you’re a mom, the way that you carry yourself, the way you talk to people, the way that you react to failure, these are things that are going to be modeled by the people who are following you,” she said, “including your children.”

Share:
More In Culture
Time Exec. Editor Dan Macsai Discusses Process on 'Person of the Year' Pick
Since 1927, Time Magazine has chosen its Person of the Year to acknowledge the world's biggest and most influential change makers. This year it was global phenomenon Taylor Swift. Dan Macsai, executive editor of Time, spoke with Cheddar News about the process to make its pick and what's involved. So I got the chance to chat with times executive editor Dan Max about how time made its decision and the entire person of the year issue.
On the Scene: Tinseltown in Manhattan
Dean O'Neill, CEO and owner of Pekarna Restaurant & Event Space, joined Cheddar News to discuss a new Christmas-themed pop-up called Tinsel Town in the Upper West Side of Manhattan with some delicious food and drinks.
Load More