I think what he was referring to was the fact that his daughter's reading and writing ability were severely hindered by this Whole Language approach introduced my the new first grade teacher. When my wife got her degree back in the mid 90's, the current method of teaching reading was Whole Language and Creative Spelling ("Johnny, how do you think that word is spelled?) The result has been a buttload of kids that can't read or write. Why do you think "Hooked on Phonics" is so successful these days? That business venture would have flopped 20 years ago when schools actually taught phonics themselves. Now that they don't, some corporation can make big bucks on your child's learning difficulties.
What's with all of the special needs programs these days? Are there that many kids with "special needs", or just a bunch of kids that would benefit from some creative motivation and small amounts of specialized tutoring. Is the fact that we're fumbling the ball with teaching methods like "Whole Language" the reason we have some many kids with "Learning disabilities"? I'm not making light of kids with real problems, as some genuinely need all of the help they can get. But it seems the more money we pump into special needs programs, the more special needs students we're treating/creating.
I shudder to think what would have become of me if I were going to school now. I probably would have been assigned my own special needs staff:
- 25 years ago my kindergarden teacher wanted to hold me back because I couldn't use scissors. She neglected to notice I was a lefty using righty scissors.
- My first grade reading teacher thought I was a slow learner until she realized I knew all the answers but was too shy to raise my hand. My parents worked with me after school for a few months to get me back up to speed with the higher level kids.
- My fourth grade teacher noticed me really disinterested in math early in the school year. I told her I knew most of what she was teaching and was just bored. I was moved up to a higher level.
How many students have the ablitly but are wrongly labeled "special needs"? I see students these days being classified as "haves" and "haves nots". You're either a genius, or you have a learning disability. Things need to change from top to bottom in our schools before anything gets better.
I'm proud to be associated in a small way with a group of folks who are intelligent and caring.
Smitty, I went through the same issues in elementary school. My 1st grade teacher told my parents she thought I was "retarded" because I wouldn't sit still and would go off on my own in the middle of her class and do what I wanted. I was simply bored to death.
After they figured out I was actually pretty bright, they started to sit me next to the less smart kids in the hopes my smarts "would rub off on the others". That was 4th grade and my last in public schools.
My son David is the splitting image of his Dad...has the same issues at school. Except in today's schools they wanted to give him drugs to "help" him. No way. Not happening. I had several very contentious meetings with school officials and finally convinced them that David was just bored to death.
So to "humor" me they tracked him into honors classes. Guess what? David has been a perfect student since. And he's still bored.
Bottom line is if your kid isn't meeting some standardized image of what the educational system thinks is a good student, there's going to be trouble. And parents have to be vigilant so their kids don't get lost in the system.