7 hours ago
Friday, October 9, 2009
Apparently it's Friday.
And what a Friday it's been.
Today I've realised that one of the seven-year-olds I teach is in fact no ordinary child, but my nemesis. This epiphany was compounded by her cheery "Look, Miss Chelsea, I have hair cut the same as you now!"
Yes, yes you do. I generally don't have issues with challenging kids. I have rules, there are consequences. I'm happy to be the responsible adult that doles out tough love and kicks them into some kind of understanding about group activity, cooperation, participation, personal space, respect, manners, grammar, grooming, musicality, deportment, and oh yeah, ballet. Nearly forgot that one.
It's a little hard to get onto sometimes when it's October and eight months on parents haven't taken the hint about writing R and L inside school shoes so their child sees this information five days a week. I wrote R and L on the feet of three girls today.
It's not that they're slow kids, or "too young" (HA!), it's that their parents have failed to provide consistent opportunities for this information to be assimilated and integrated. This gets me a little tetchy, as you might have noticed.
Evidence of their capability to learn and retain information: over the last ten weeks my littlies (predominantly six and seven year-olds) have learnt two ballet routines. They have not only learned the dances and spatial information (where to start, order to line up in, direction to travel and formation/pattern changes) but can sing the music. Yeah. Forty-five minutes once per week.
So, what's wrong with their parents/teachers/every other adult in their world? Is it just that the kids live down to their (the adults') amazingly low expectations?
In other news, celebrated six years of coupledom with my lovely hubs tonight. Yep, six years ago he decided that perhaps I was actually the girl for him and proposed some kind of going out arrangement to my skeletal and pathetic post-glandular self. The rest is history.
He's remarkably able to view the world with a child's perspective. While sometimes this kills me, I'm reassured by his idealism and sunny disposition.
He's certainly a much nicer and more deliberate person than I will ever be, and I'm quite sure he will be a parent who teaches shoe-tying with infinite, graceful patience. (From my earlier ranting, the attentive reader will deduce this to be a compliment of the highest order.) uhnm, yeh. He's awesome.
Now, if only I could sneak him into ballet to deal with my nemesis.
Labels:
it's really not that hard,
Pugs are strange but husbands are stranger.,
Ranty McRant Rant,
RWP are breeding.,
stupid people are the worst kind. how can I make more people think about things with their common-sense brain. Who else has a common sense brain. Hands up.,
whatever happened to manners? the last time I looked people stil said please and thank you and may I? WHAT HAPPENED?
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4 comments:
So funny to have a nemesis with the "same haircut as you"! Cheeky little brat....
Lovely to read your kind comments about the fellow in your life. It's always a good thing to be paired with someone nicer than you are. And I speak from experience!!
Happy weekend to you!
I have something for you over at my blog.
6 years is good news. Have a great weekend.
Us men have an uncanny ability to look at things from a child's perspective. It has to do with the fact that we never grow up! I would leave a longer comment, but Scooby Doo is on and I am totally engrossed! HAHAHA!!!
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