"What's Really Going on When Kids with Average
(or Above) IQs Struggle in School and Drive Their Teachers and Parents
Crazy?"
Chatting
with friends and making jokes gets Mark through his day at school.
Of course, his teacher is extremely irritated with him for constantly
disrupting the class with his talking and his jokes. And she cannot
understand how such a smart boy can refuse to do his work and get
very little accomplished during the day.
The truth about
Mark is that he is very intelligent, but he can't read very well.
His intelligence gets him by; he can read enough to sometimes get
answers right, to sometimes get parts of assignments done. Unfortunately,
he can get just enough done to make it look like he can do it, so
when he doesn't, he looks unmotivated.
Mark's
teacher thinks he has Attention Deficit Disorder.
In reality, he is dyslexic.
He can't
do the work so he finds other ways to entertain himself. He's getting
Fs in 4 th grade. Mark's mother sees how hard he tries at home,
but even she is frustrated because Mark can't seem to get any of
his homework done without her there helping every minute.
Dad is mad because
he thinks Mark could do better if he tried harder. And Mark just
wants to give up. No matter how hard he tries, he still can't manage
to make the grade.
Sports
is the name of the game for Josh. He's good at them all
and brags about going to college on a sports scholarship of some
kind. Secretly, though, Josh is pretty worried. He can't seem to
make the grades in school and the football coach is talking like
he might not be able to continuing playing.
Josh puts on
an attitude of not caring, but deep down he's humiliated and embarrassed.
How can he be so good at every sport he tries and be so lousy at
school?
His
dad thinks he's just lazy. " Maybe, that's it,"
Josh thinks. I mean why else would it take him so much longer to
read the darned history assignment and then still not have a clue
what it's about. Math is OK, but he always seems to forget to do
some of the problems, and English, forget it! How's he supposed
to read a whole chapter and write an essay on it every night? He
can't think of a thing to say when he gets ready to write. Maybe
he's just stupid. Maybe he should forget about college.
His parents are going to ground him anyway if he gets one more F.
Josh is one
of those kids who can read, write, and do math, but just can't seem
to "pull it all together" to get his work done with any
consistency.
Math
makes Amanda want to cry. In fact, most nights, she does
end up in tears when her dad is trying to help her get through her
homework. It just
doesn't make sense.
And it takes
forever.
She feels like
she's trying really hard, but those numbers and signs on the page
just don't make sense. She manages to get her homework done with
her dad's help, but when test time comes around, it's all over.
She's gotten in the habit of hiding her tests so her parents don't
know she's gotten another failing grade.
Amanda hates
math and she's beginning to hate school as well. All she really
wants is to have friends, but somehow that doesn't seem to work
out very well either. Whenever she makes a new friend, they end
up in some kind of a misunderstanding. Amanda doesn't even know
what happened, but her new girlfriend quit hanging out with her.
Somehow, whether its math class or talking to other kids in the
hall, Amanda finds herself confused or saying the wrong thing. Even
when she tries her best, people make fun of her and her teachers
and parents think she's not trying.
Amanda's
real problem is her auditory processing.
Her poor listening
skills make math hard because she misses some of the
important information the teacher is explaining. She
can get by in other classes because she can fill-in the gaps by
re-reading the chapter, but she's completely lost in math. Too much
has been missed along the way.
Amanda misses
information in conversation as well, so she says the wrong thing
or misinterprets what other people say. She's always getting her
feeling hurt and getting defensive so other kids don't really want
to hang out with her.
Regular
kids, with average to above average intelligence are sitting in
class, day after day, frustrated and misunderstood by their teachers,
parents, classmates, and even themselves.
They want
to do well in school. They know they should be able to. But somehow,
they just can't seem to do it.
- Why does
it take them so long to finish their work?
- Why do they
have hours more homework than other kids in their class?
- Are they
just stupid? Must be, since everyone else seems to be able to
do the work more easily.
Surprisingly,
these kids exist in every classroom in every school.
They might be good at hiding it, but they are suffering nevertheless.
Somehow, no matter how good they are at other things, reading or
math, or some other aspect of school just isn't working out for
them as well as it should.
The
4 Groups of Learning Skills
Easy learning
is built upon a continuum of neurodevelopmental learning skills
that start with reflexes in utero and continue developing to the
highest levels of thinking. We think of that continuum in four basic
levels:
- Developmental
or Core Learning Skills - Learning, or information processing,
is actually stimulated by movement. It begins in utero with movements
triggered by reflexes. When babies are born, these reflexes begin
to go away, or become integrated, as higher levels of thinking
begin to take over. Integration happens through trial and error
movements and gradually intentional movement. Physical movement
and exploration is critical to developing
visual skills and becoming internally organized.
People often think of organization in terms of planning and organizing
time, projects and materials, but internal organization is needed
in order to sit in a chair or walk across a room without bumping
into things.
- Processing
Skills - Processing skills is the second level in the
learning skills continuum. These include such skills as memory,
attention, visual processing (how we think about information that
we can see or imagine), auditory processing (how we think about
information that we hear, such as the sounds in words or the tone
of voice our friend is using), language processing, and processing
speed ( how quickly we can think about and respond to information).
Challenges in any of these areas will
cause the learner to have to work longer and harder than they
should.
- Executive
Function Skills - Executive function is like the brain's
CEO. This is the part of the brain that guides our behavior and
attention, that helps us plan and reason and solve problems. Students
are notorious for putting long term projects off to the last minute.
But the bottom line is it takes a number of sophisticated executive
function skills to plan out and execute a project.
If a student looks lazy, unmotivated, or disorganized, the real
culprit may weak executive function skills.
- Academic
Skills or higher learning skills
- The highest level on the continuum is academic and higher learning
skills. Success in this arena depends upon a solid base of skills
in the levels below. People of all ages learn how to compensate
for their challenges, but compensating is hard and inefficient.
The supporting skills must be in place
in order to learn new information easily.
Learning
problems are very broad. They look different on different
kids, but the thing they have in common is this:
Something
is breaking down in their processing of information.
Learning is
all about processing incoming information - whether it's a toddler
picking up a cracker and finding out that it breaks in his hand
or a 12th grader doing calculus.
When
students that you know are struggling in school, when you are tempted
to write it off as lazy, or attention, or immaturity, take a closer
look. There are dozens of skills that may not all be working together
to make learning easy.
The
Good News: All those skills can be taught, built, corrected. There
is REAL hope for all those kids. |