(Note: This article contains criticism,
not condemnation. It is addressed to teachers and parents of -- for lack of a better word -- average children attending average schools. It is not addressed to those who work in overcrowded classrooms with a large number of behaviorally or emotionally impaired children, whether impaired for biological, neurological, societal, familial, or
environmental reasons. This article should be read within a parenthesis of
admiration and gratitude for all teachers who have dedicated their lives to the
education of children -- mine and others'. To all of them, including those I
address in my criticism, I give thanks.)
I've been to scores of school conferences with my children over the past
twenty some years.
Among some of the most common comments I've heard are:
"He/She is not living up to his/her potential."
"If he only tried harder he could do so much more."
"She doesn't participate/listen/pay attention."
"He is restless and moves around a lot."
"I present the material but your child doesn't seem to get it, even though
others in the classroom do."
"Have you considered private tutoring?"
Rarely do these teachers see themselves as having anything to do with my
child's school performance. Responsibility for poor school performance (as
judged by the teacher) is primarily placed on my child and/or on my wife and me.
We leave the conference feeling that we should do nothing but sit with our
children helping them with their homework in every bit of their and our free
time. We berate ourselves for not being more success-oriented with them, more
demanding, stricter, more focused on their future success rather than on their
present happiness. Suddenly their hobbies and free time seem evil and
distracting from the business of their life as students as they prepare in the
classroom to be future contributing members of adult society.
I get the feeling, and sometimes it is stated by the teacher, that if the top
ten percent of the class is doing well, then the teacher is doing well.
Obviously these teachers think that if some of the students are grasping the
material, it is the fault of the others that they are not.
And if this fault is not the result from my child's lack of trying, then it
must be the fault of some inherent learning deficit or lack in the home
environment that requires outside intervention -- outside the classroom, outside
the teacher's realm of responsibility.
Being the provocative person that I am, I ask these teachers, "Well, what
could you be doing to help my child learn better?"
This question always evokes a certain degree of shock or disbelief. I'm not
sure if the shock is simply that I dared ask the question, or that anyone would
think that the teacher, rather than the student or the home, could possibly be
lacking in any way. After all, he/she has been teaching for years and many of
his/her students have been quite successful.
But, I'm also concerned about the ones that are not so successful, the
marginal ones. Not only because one or more of my children fell into this
category at some time or other in their school careers, but also because I know
so many more children -- children of friends or colleagues -- who, by the
school's and teacher's standards, seem to be "failing."
What about them? What is their fate? Are they all doomed if their parents
can't afford private tutors and/or expensive schools tailored to their special
needs? What will become of them if their parents can't manage to change their
home environments into havens of scholarship, such that their children
immediately understand and respond to the importance of paying attention and
grasping "the material," regardless of how uninspiring the material or teacher
might be, or how disruptive and distracting or boring the class atmosphere?
I also ask this question because, by and large, I have pretty good kids. They
are motivated, well behaved (within normal kid limits), helpful at home, and by
and large responsive to positive intervention and stimulus. They relate well
with adults, though they, too, have their standards when it comes to how they
respond to those with whom they relate.
And, finally, I ask this question because it seems to me that the
responsibility for education lies with the teacher.
One of my children recently talked to me about the difference between
"educating" and "teaching." I asked her what she thought the difference was and
she said: A teacher is interested in what she is teaching; an educator is
interested in the students.
A teacher, she described, is someone who stands in front of the class and
gives over "the material." A teacher, she said, expects the students to just
"get it." And if they don't, it's the kid's fault.
An educator, she said, is looking at the student, looking to see if she
understands or not, and, if not, is trying to figure out how to help her get it
more easily. An educator, she said, understands that all kids are different,
learn at different speeds and in different ways and then tries to find a way to
teach her students in a way that they can understand. It's like a partnership,
she said, not a war or a contest.
I loved that last sentence: like a partnership, not a war or a contest.
And it certainly matches what I feel in those school meetings. If my children
feel anything like what my wife and I feel in these meetings, then they're going
through the day feeling blamed and ashamed, criticized and lacking.
Not too conducive to learning, it seems to me.
The other thing that has always mystified me and that provokes me to ask my
questions in these school meetings is that my children seem to "perform"
differently with different teachers. One son, for example, was completing first
grade and at the end-of-year parent-teacher conference I was told that he was
simply not going to be able to keep up with the other students the following
year. He was having too much trouble learning to read and write. The teacher had neither advice nor solutions. He had done all he could. The fault lay with my child and with the deficit of time being spent with him at home.
Because of this conference and the critical, hopeless attitude I encountered
in the ones that came before it, I took my child out of this school and put him
in another. I would not risk that by the time my child reached the age of seven
he would already be branded "a failure."
The next year he was reading and writing like a little bandit and his teacher
had nothing but praise for him. He actually called him a "little tzaddik."
Suddenly he had gone from failure to success with the only change being the
teacher and the school. My child who couldn't learn to read was now
spending free time at home reading books and magazines without effort.
Then the next year his school day extended, and he had a morning teacher and
an afternoon teacher. The morning teacher thought he was the best thing since
sliced bread. Attentive, well behaved, bright, participatory, etc., etc.
The afternoon teacher found him to be lazy, non attentive, slow and
uncooperative, a description that I thought fit the teacher to a tee when I met
him in the teacher conference. (Sorry, folks, but someone has to say these
things.)
When I spoke to this teacher about the relationship between him and my son,
he didn't know what I was talking about nor why that should make any difference
in my son's ability to behave and grasp the material. I noticed how little eye
contact he made with me and my wife and I and wondered if the same was true with
my son.
Hmmmm.
A friend of mine just told me about his child who is having a so-so year.
With some teachers he's doing great, with others not so well. After conferring
with both the teacher and the principal it was decided that tutoring was the
only solution for my friend's boy. His father, my friend, questioned the need
for tutoring since there are only ten kids in his son's class. It was hard for
him (and me) to believe that with so few students the teacher couldn't find a
way to tailor his teaching to meet the needs of the different students. But, in
answer to this question, the principal told my friend that this teacher was
brilliant in the subject that he was teaching and gave it over in a very clear
and succinct manner. It was unrealistic, he said, to expect the teacher to
adjust his style to meet the needs of above average, average, and below average
students.
I asked my son who is also in the same class (a different son than that
mentioned above) about the teacher. He said that the teacher goes over the
material once, expects everyone to get it, doesn't review, and never changes his
tone or pace of delivery. He said that the brightest kids in the class had no
problems, but two-thirds of the class was lagging behind, including him. Well, I
thought, that's interesting. The teacher is missing two thirds of his class,
reaching and teaching three out of ten kids. Something didn't sit right with me,
especially since my son was not one of the top three. He was not having the same
amount of difficulty as my friend's son, but enough difficulty that I was
concerned. My friend and I decided to talk to the principal together, at which
time we were stonewalled. Our wives convinced us that no amount of intervention
was going to change the way this teacher taught, and encouraged us to find a
tutor for our sons.
Enter the tutor.
After a few sessions with my son I called the tutor and asked how my son was
doing. Wonderfully, he said. He's very bright and catches the material very
easily. The thing the tutor was most impressed with was the level of questions
my son asked and his desire to learn and understand.
When I asked my son about this he said, yeah, it's so different from my
class. I don't get to ask many questions in class, and when I do the teacher is
always so impatient and makes me feel bad for asking, he gets irritated because
I've interrupted him. So I stopped asking questions.
Hmmmm.
I must reiterate that my children are by and large bright and successful
children. They pursue many interests. They read constantly. They are, each in
his or her own way, curious and love to learn about things. They can hold their
own at the Shabbat table, giving over the week's Torah portion or speaking about
many things in ways that hold the interest of parents, siblings and guests
alike. They are also bold, energetic, and like to laugh a lot.
Yet in the course of their school career each one of them has, at one time or
another, engendered a school conference and school experience such as I am
describing. And always in times of difficulty the blame falls squarely on the
child's shoulders, while teachers continue to deliver their material and run
their class in the same way, relating to my children's difficulties by trampling
on their self esteem and self image with blame, insult and criticism.
I admit I have biases.
I believe that children innately want to be successful. I believe that
children are curious and want to learn. I believe that they want their school
experience to be positive and enjoyable.
I also believe that children are children. They get restless when bored and
sometimes even when not. They need to be able to move around more than adults do
or would like children to. They cannot tolerate boredom, nor can they tolerate
injustice or hypocrisy. They are willing to give respect, but they also need
some sent their way, and, like most people, they respond poorly when respect is
demanded of them, and give it freely when it is earned and deserved.
Like most people, children are kind when treated kindly, and well behaved
when others behave well towards them. Like most people, they don't respond well
to criticism or judgment, especially when leveled unfairly. Like most people,
they respond well to praise and encouragement, to people who foster their
positive self-image as opposed to those who make them feel stupid and like a
failure.
And more than most people, children's imaginations must be captured if they
are to be attentive and learn. They also need to believe they are cared about
from those who expect their performance, and this caring must be demonstrated in
the individual attention they receive, attention that considers their level of
intelligence, their feelings, and their ability, because of their innate
natures, to grasp some subjects, while having difficulty with others.
I am not blaming only the teachers nor am I letting children or parents off
the hook. I am strict with my children about respecting their teachers,
regardless of how negatively they may perceive them. And my wife and I
constantly strive to point out the best qualities of their teachers and the
importance of learning the subjects they teach and behaving well at school. We
believe that there are modes of behavior and decorum that our children must
adhere to regardless of their likes and dislikes or judgments or even boredom.
And for the most part my children respond to our admonishments and advice.
But in my heart of hearts, and especially following these infamous school
conferences, I believe what my daughter said: that school should be a
partnership, and in a partnership responsibility is equally shared. The child
looks at what he/she can do better; the parents look at what they can do better;
and the teacher looks at what he/she can do better. And the principal looks at
what all of them can do better together. He/she is the expert and resource on
how to better organize classes, how to aid a teacher in relating better to each
of the students in his/her class. The joint goal of all of them -- us -- is to
find a way that enables each child to succeed at school, with success defined as
learning, feeling good about themselves, behaving respectfully and appropriately
and enjoying their childhood.
In this environment, whether in the classroom or the school conference, a
very different kind of dialogue would take place. A dialogue not focused on
fault, blame and deficit, but on improvement, encouragement and advantage. In
this environment -- and I've been in this kind of school environment, as well --
not only are the students praised and encouraged by the teachers, but so are the
teachers praised and encouraged by the children and parents.