I once read a supposedly amusing account of a mother whose
young son left the house one morning to catch the school bus. But he returned after a couple minutes and in
a discouraged voice told her that school was boring and he hated it and wanted
to stay home. Her reply was something
along the lines of, "Life’s tough.
Get on the bus."
I didn't find that story funny.
Not that I think children should be allowed to dictate what they want to do for the day. But there are often occasions when children ask for "bread" or "fish" and we are guilty of handing out a "stone" or a "snake" instead. Are we being thoughtless — or maybe just too busy to find out what the real problem is?
Not that I think children should be allowed to dictate what they want to do for the day. But there are often occasions when children ask for "bread" or "fish" and we are guilty of handing out a "stone" or a "snake" instead. Are we being thoughtless — or maybe just too busy to find out what the real problem is?
Children love to manipulate their parents (of course, we
adults never manipulate people, do we?!) so it is often easy to dismiss their
complaints as just that: complaints. But
sometimes a child is honestly trying to tell you that there is a problem. He simply can’t articulate it better than to
say something is "boring" or "stupid" or he "hates
it." In that case, it might be wise
to inquire further, rather than simply say, "Life’s tough. Do it anyway."
“Why is math boring, Johnny?”
“’Cuz I already know this stuff! I’m tired of fractions!”
“Alright, Johnny, let’s skip to the test at the end of the
chapter on fractions. If you can do all
the problems, we’ll skip the rest of fractions and go on to decimals.”
“Sally, we don’t say ‘hate’ in this house. Why don’t you rephrase that?”
“I don’t like piano lessons.”
“Why not?’
“I’ve been playing the same dumb song for weeks! The teacher makes me do it over again every
week and it’s so silly!”
“Well, Sally, let’s have a talk with your teacher and ask
her to give you some different songs to work on. But I’ll expect you to go back to practicing
harder if we do that.”
It is easy to have a paradigm of how things should be — and
make our children follow the paradigm whether it makes sense or not. We need to ask ourselves questions like, “Why
are we doing this?” “Is there a better
way to accomplish our goals?”
Are we
finishing every problem in the math chapter just because we feel we must,
regardless of whether Johnny needs all those extra problems? Remember, the math book authors don’t know
Johnny’s individual needs — you do. You can customize his education
accordingly. Are we having 9-year-old
Susie do written book reports because that’s the way book reports should be? Maybe oral reports would be less daunting and
more fun until her writing skills improve — after all, at this point the
important thing is that she read the book and can tell you about it.
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Sometimes the “snakes” we hand out have a more simple
explanation — our culture is so busy that we rarely slow down to find out what
Johnny or Susie actually need. Who has
time in between piano, dance, soccer, co-op and church activities to find out
if Jimmy’s problems with reading are due to bad eyesight or bad attitude? ‘Oh well, never mind, we’ll just keep giving
him reading assignments and hope he gets it.”
We need to make sure we are making time to give "good
gifts" to our children — gifts of focused time and attention and response
to their needs. Let’s make sure we are
handing out bread and fish, not stones and snakes!
Written by Heather Sheen
Written by Heather Sheen