Walt on Learning Styles
By Kenneth L.
Pierpont
In the third grade we moved to a little School in
Quincy, Ohio and I was enrolled in Mrs. Short's third
grade class. She took it upon herself to teach me
numbers. Now, I have nothing against numbers, nor did I
initially dislike Mrs. Short. (I was an affable sort
even in my childhood.) But the methods she used with
the "normal" children were a little rough on me. I have
a relatively logical mind. Arithmetic is not a problem
for me unless I have to concentrate on it for hours at
a time on a spring day when I feel like there are
explosions going off inside me.
If you know me you will not be surprised by my
revelation that I was what they called hyperactive when
I was a kid. (Some people think I still am.) I was born
before they started calling it "Attention Deficit
Disorder" and making you feel special about it.
Teachers took turns lecturing me, paddling me, sitting
me in the corner, and ridiculing me. My parents even
briefly considered drugging me after the ink blot thing
didn't pan out. The cruelest treatment of all was
keeping me in from recess.
Now I think a wise educator would realize that what a
boy like me needed more than anything when struggling
to concentrate on a long column of figures is a little
stretch break from time to time. My mind worked fine,
but not in confinement. Some species don't breed in
captivity. Kids like me can't concentrate in captivity.
So dear old Mrs. Short would add long columns of
numbers to those which had already discouraged me
beyond hope and then with what appeared to be to be a
mixture of gleeful sadism pronounce that there would be
no recess until all the problems were done correctly.
She rightly deduced that I did have the intelligence
needed to solve the problems, but she was intolerant or
ignorant of what was happening in my little
nine-year-old mind.
I suspect it was by a mixture of grace and pity that I
had advanced to the fourth grade the next year and
studied across the hall in Mr. Davis' class. Mrs. Short
died that year. My Dad and I went to the funeral home
to pay our respects, and on the way home he noticed my
somber thoughtfulness. He assured me that I had
contributed in no way to her death and that she had
lived to a good old age and died peacefully in her
sleep. He thought she probably had students that caused
her more concern than I had which released me from the
inordinate guilt that clouded my soul.
Now I'm a big guy and I understand that other than my
fair share of the old basic sin nature, I really wasn't
broken or defective, they just hadn't figured out my
"learning style." Learning the "sevens" by rote memory
for no apparent reason never really inspired me to
concentrate. But if I was out under the old Studebaker
with Dad on a Saturday afternoon listening to the
Buckeyes beat up on one of their many inferior
opponents, and Dad said; 'How many more touchdowns do
the Buckeyes need to break fifty," learning my "sevens"
made a little more sense.
Walt Whitman wrote:
"When proofs, the figures were arranged in columns
before me,
When I, sitting heard the astronomer
Where he lectured with much applause in the
classroom
How soon unaccountable I became tired and sick
'Til rising and gliding out,
I wandered off by myself in the mystical, moist night
air,
And from time to time looked up in perfect silence at
the stars."
I agree with Walt. I don't mind a good lecture or book
on the wonders of astronomy especially one with color
pictures, but nothing compares with a stroll under the
majestic night sky. My advice to little boys who are
like me: "Never let school get in the way of your
learning."
Kenneth L.
Pierpont is a communicator. He and his wife Lois
homeschool their eight children. He is the Sr. Pastor
of First Baptist Church in Fremont, Michigan. He
frequently speaks at Camps, Conferences, Retreats and
Homeschool meetings. He loves story-telling, especially
telling the story of Jesus.
©Copyright 2006 by ADHD of
the Christian Kind.
|