Trying to teach my home schooled daughter has been
enlightening to say the least. I have
learned more than I think I have taught her.
Like, how to rephrase the question to actually mean something that
somewhat resembles what I want to ask.
She is a sweet girl who is very bright and gifted in many ways. She has challenges that lead us to
homeschooling which she has made remarkable progress overcoming. My daughter is persistent, thoughtful, creative, beautiful, forgiving, and has an incredible memory. She is also one of my greatest challenges in
life.
When she takes a test on the computer, the system grades it
and we can track what she needs to study more. Yesterday she had three questions on the test. If one question is missed, you do not pass the test and must re-take it. As with all tests, I let her work on it by
herself. When she came to me to report
her score she was disappointed that she needed to take it again. She had missed one question. Math is
especially challenging with her dyslexia.
I asked her, “Do you know what you did wrong?”
“Yes. I chose the
wrong button to click on. Then I got it wrong.”
“Okay. I mean, do you
know how to fix it?”
“Yes. Click on the
right answer.”
“I mean, what to you need to do to find the right
answer?"
At this point I am trying to figure out how to word my
question in a way that won’t make me laugh or make her feel stupid or
embarrassed. Often she
switches the numbers around. I wanted her to
tell me something like, I subtracted when I should have added. Or maybe I thought the five was a two. What she said made me send her back to the test because I couldn't find a response.
She said, “Yes, I know exactly what I need to do!” Her eyes
got bigger as she stepped closer to me, waving her hand to emphasize the words
as she spoke. “I need to use my brain! I need to focus and do my best, and not
cry!” She stood there with a giant grin, slightly bouncing on her toes. She was emotionally ready to try again.
She returned in tears confused that when she used her brain,
she still got the same problem wrong. I
went to see for myself what it was and we worked through it together so when
she took the test again, she passed.
This is my mantra this week.
Use your brain. Focus. Don’t cry.
Ask for help. Accept the
help. What a marvelous plan! Do you have any experience with needing to follow this plan? Feel free to share them.
Hi Lydia, I absolutely loved this post. I thought the back-and-forth between you and your daughter was adorable. It reminded me of those tests where children would respond to questions like: When did WW II start? with "After WW I". Kudos for not bursting into laughter - I don't know how you managed to avoid it. That being said, after reading through your other work, I want to invite you exclusively to be a guest author for a new authority site, which would offer you great exposure as a writer, since our online community is dedicated to moms. Please drop me an e-mail at alexandra (at) mum . info (remove the spaces and replace 'at' with @ ) if you would like to receive more info on who we are and what we do.
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