Thinking Outside the Multiple Choice Bubbles

  1. Melissa says:

    My oldest is a year away from kindergarten and his little mind works differently. He picks things up quickly, has an insane memory, and quickly tires of repetition. He gets this look in his eyes like “Seriously, you crazy adults, I got this sh*t. Can we move on now?” and just sits there looking at us or starts doing whatever he darn well pleases (he’s speech delayed so we don’t always know how much he knows, but sometimes he gives us a glimpse and we’re like HOLY CRAP WHEN DID HE LEARN THAT). He loves being in classroom settings and being with other kids but I do worry about how actual school will go for him. Will his teachers understand him? Will they be frustrated by him? Will they squelch the way his brain works until he hates school???

    Ugh, I thought this was supposed to be simple. You pick a good school, you put your kid in the school, bada-bing-bada-boom, you’re good.

    • suburbanturmoil says:

      Having been around for 3rd-12th grade with my stepdaughters, I learned a LOT of important lessons about education. My best advice now is to do your research and keep an open mind when it comes to your child’s education. Once I started digging, I discovered that there were LOTS of school options… Our school district is opening new specialized schools every year, new charter schools are opening, tutorial programs and classical schools (both cheaper than traditional private schools) are sprouting up, and there’s an enormous home school community with all the bells and whistles of a traditional school.

      I’d also advise you to ASK (politely!) for what you want from your child’s school. I started doing that early on with my little ones and everyone was always willing to work with me. The worst your administration can say is NO. But you can’t know unless you ask.

      Good luck, Melissa! I’m sure he’ll be fine. My children’s teachers have become some of my favorite people in the world. 🙂

    • TeacherLady says:

      As a teacher- it bums me out when parents assume all we teach are the tests. I teach in a county near you- and I promise I don’t only teach my kids to take tests.

      • suburbanturmoil says:

        I’m curious what made you think that Melissa assumes that all teachers teach are the tests- I don’t see where she wrote anything about that…

        I’ll say personally that our teachers have all been awesome and as accommodating as possible- I don’t think they enjoy the constraints of the educational system any more than the parents or kids do. I believe the system as a whole needs updating- If we’re now celebrating out-of-the-box thinkers in the workplace, shouldn’t we accept unorthodox (and effective) ways of problem-solving in the classroom? How exactly do we do that? I have no idea! That’s why I’m trying to deal with it in a positive way at home. 🙂

        • Teacher Lady says:

          I’m on my phone- I tried to comment on the whole post- not just hers… Sorry!

          • suburbanturmoil says:

            No problem- I still can’t figure out where I wrote that I believe teachers only teach to the test, though. I don’t believe that, so if I wrote it, I must’ve been high. 😉 Honestly, every teacher we’ve had has been doing the very best that she could- There’s so much that teachers are required to cover that I think it hampers their natural creativity in the classroom, and that has always made me sad- for our teachers and for our kids.

  2. Liz Miller says:

    My 12-year-old has some of the same traits as Punky, but when we’ve told him (truthfully) that excelling at the boring rote memorization stuff gets you to the interesting investigative stuff faster, he buckles down to memorize the flash cards. And then he rewards himself with making Pokemon Power Point presentations and learning Japanese using Rosetta Stone.

    • suburbanturmoil says:

      That’s awesome. My problem with Punky has always been that if she doesn’t connect what she’s learning to real life, she completely zones out. Give her a math problem involving money and she’ll solve it correctly every time. Make it simply decimals and it’s hit or miss. If she does a lab to learn concepts, she’ll know them backward and forward. If she reads them in a dry, boring textbook, she has trouble focusing and retaining the information. I think that as she gets older, learning to “play the game” and simply memorize what she needs to memorize in order to get the grade will be easier for her- but now at 10, it’s like pulling teeth. I’m hoping to work toward the memorization skills and make it as fun and applicable as possible in the meantime. I’m glad we both have the time to do this now, because when I only had her for a few hours each day after school, it just wasn’t going to happen.

      • Liz Miller says:

        Hmmmmmm….
        One thing that helped me when I was her age was to try to read the text book like a BOOK, instead of “read paragraphs 17 and 18 for tomorrow”. Alternatively, buying a good reading book about the era or concept. If it’s rote memorization, there are some great websites doing flashcard games.

        • suburbanturmoil says:

          Great suggestions. I’ve also discovered that just having a conversation about the reading afterward helps solidify it in her mind- which means that I have to do the reading, too, but it’s worth it! 🙂

  3. Yvonne says:

    My son has a photographic memory. He can look at a page and within minutes repeat what he looked at in full detail. The same with oral memory, you speak it or he watches it and he’s got it. So he is VERY easily bored in class. He can look at a math problem and tell you the answer, but the teacher wants to see the work. He explains to them he doesn’t know how to do the work he just “Sees the answer” and they actually get MAD! If the child can sit in your class and demonstrate to you that he doesn’t need to do the work and can get the answer he obviously isn’t cheating! He has shown you he can do it. We spend hours upon hours agonizing over math homework and there’s no need for the stress it creates. We need to get away from the cookie cutter learning process and let kids excel in their own way. I wish so deeply that I could homeschool, but it just wouldn’t work out in our world, but he’s 13 and he’s adapting so fingers crossed we’ll get him thru this!

  4. Diana says:

    I can appreciate this so, so much. Both of our kids have minds that work differently, as do I. School was hell for me. I was constantly bored and had no one to advocate for me.

    We’ve been thinking a lot about pulling one of ours out and homeschooling so I’ll be watching your experience and thoughts.

  5. mamalang says:

    I can’t remember if I commented on FB or not, but both my younger two had answers like this when they were in elementary. We’re blessed that they went to an elementary with awesome teachers that saw the humor in their answers. I’ve approached these type of answers similar to how you did with the variable discussion. It’s okay to think outside the box, and it’s okay to ask questions. But sometimes, you have to answer the questions or do the things the way you’re told to do them. I see my now Junior getting to use these skills more now, and learning when the right time is to just answer the question, and when it’s okay to debate more.

    And I showed them this, and they both said she’s right, and they totally agree with her answer 🙂

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