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FAQ
from A to B
By
Guy Peckham, Parent
A
is for Aquatics
Q.
When did you have your first inspiration to join Clearwater
School?
A.
In 1962 (several decades before the school opened in
Seattle). My family lived in Wabash, a small town in
north central Indiana. Our city's great claim was "The
first electrically lighted city in the world".
I always assumed this was true, but never checked historical
records for the facts. However, while we had electricity
in abundance, the town was missing a public pool or
beach.
This
is where my dad enters the picture. He grew up as an
all-sports athlete in upstate New York, and had a great
desire for all of us kids to learn to swim. With no
local place to go, the local Red Cross offered swimming
lessons at a lake about 20 miles away. So it was early
in the summer that I found myself bussed to a lake with
chilly greenish brown water, being coached - or coaxed
- to submerge and open my eyes. I did, and I was frightened
beyond all measure from all the terrible monsters I
knew were lurking in the water.
After
returning home I told my parents that I would never
go back to the swim lessons. My dad was quite distressed
at my wanting to quit, offering me every incentive he
could think of to keep me in the class. This was not
an easy task - I wasn't giving in. So, the bidding escalated
until he offered to buy me a new bike if I would stay
in the class. Nothing doing, I wouldn't budge.
In
the following summer, our city opened an Olympic-sized
pool (paid for by the Honeywell corporation). I once
again was enrolled in swim classes. This time, though,
things were different: I was a year older, but mostly
I was really ready to learn. Learning to swim was now
fun, plus I knew I was safe because monsters couldn't
survive in chlorinated water.
B
is for Biking
Q.
So how does this relate to the Clearwater School?
A.
I thought you'd never ask. Our daughter, Claire, a Clearwater
student, was being encouraged by us a.k.a. her
parents with an agenda to learn to ride a bike
several years ago. Over the course of numerous outings,
we were finding that things were just not working out.
Claire was not grasping the concept of balancing, and
she soon tired of falling off her bike. We finally realized
that our overenthusiastic approach was not helping Claire
at all, and we stopped the Dad & Mom bike school.
Instead, we decided to wait for Claire to show her own
interest in learning to ride. Eventually, this happened.
Her
pace was to practice about once every two months. In
each successive practice she demonstrated remarkable
improvement, so much so that by the third outing she
had learned to balance for 5-10 seconds at a time. Claire's
skills and interest have grown steadily since this time,
and she now requests that all join in a family bike
ride at least once a week.
C
is for Claire
Claire's
interest and enthusiasm in learning are much stronger
forms of motivation than anything we could provide.
Watching her learn to ride a bike taught us a lot.
Reprinted from the April 2002 issue
of The
School Bull, the newsletter of The Clearwater
School
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