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"Don't
You See I Don't Have Time for This?"
By
Nora Wheat, Staff person and parent
Feel
in it
Even swim in it
And music noits
Fill my bain
This
is the poem my son wrote to accompany a three-foot tall,
three-dimensional art project he created while listening
to music. This was the kindergarten project I had dreamed
of, an integrated curriculum teaching music, art, emerging
writing and literacy through a single creative activity.
My son's poem was amazing. I believed his teacher had
found a way to tap his artistic and poetic genius.
Driving
home with the masterpiece in the back of the station
wagon, I wanted to know what about the music was so
interesting. What had inspired such a moving poem? My
son sighed. "Well, I just thought Elizabeth would
like the sound of those words." I was confused.
"The song she played was alright, but I was building
a dinosaur habitat. I wanted her to be happy and I had
to do the art so I could finish my habitat before clean-up
time." My heart sank.
Trains,
dinosaurs, Pokemon, Legos, ancient civilizations. This
is the progression of my son's key interests in life
to date. Kindergarten was the age of dinosaurs. Every
day construction was under way for a new exhibit at
the dinosaur museum that doubled as our home. Extensive
research was required and our dinosaur library grew.
My son's career goals shifted between paleontologist
and paleo-artist.
Most
weekday mornings, I woke to the sound of scissors shaping
construction paper. It turns out the wings of the pterosaur
are too short and replacements need to be made. The
creations would continue as showers were taken, breakfast
was made and eaten, and school lunches were packed.
Eventually it was time. The three-minute warning would
be given. Whining isn't the word to describe his objections,
rather full-on exasperation. "I'm not ready."
"I never get to finish." "Why do I have
to go to school five days and I only get TWO days for
me?" "It's just not fair and you don't understand."
"But, but, but
.ohhhh
wwhhhyyy?"
My
moment of clarity came the week after my son created
the remarkable poem and collage strictly for the benefit
of his teacher. We were ten minutes into our morning
struggle ritual. I told him to put down the glue and
get his shoes so we could leave for school. His body
tensed, he clenched his six-year-old fists, looked me
in the eye and asked through clenched teeth, "Don't
you see I don't have time for this?" My heart sank,
again.
I
did see. "This" that he didn't have time for
was school. It interrupted his real work, requiring
him to jump through hoops before he could return to
his primary purpose in life, dinosaurs. Kindergarten
was not a good use of his time and at age six, he knew
it.
Years
earlier, I had heard of schools that extend freedom
and democracy to all students. My immediate reaction
of a skeptical raised eyebrow was counter-balanced by
a strong attraction. I imagined kids must experience
power and true learning in such an environment. I had
read books and newsletters and talked with parents and
educators about Sudbury model and other "free"
schools. I remembered a warning from my son's preschool
teacher. "Adults need to make the decisions for
children so they will feel secure and know that someone
will take care of them." I thought about my son's
poetic expressions and art and was struck that he, in
fact, had created them so that his teacher would feel
secure. This was not at all the school experience that
I wanted or needed for my son. Clearly (as he had been
telling me every morning for months) it wasn't what
he wanted or needed either. We scheduled a visiting
week at The Clearwater School.
Here
was a school that students could bring their entire
selves to. For my son this included bringing a spinosaurus
skeleton to his visiting week. With the help of students
and staff, he constructed it one day and painted it
the next. When this masterpiece came home in the back
of the station wagon, his pride was radiant. There was
no written poem to accompany it, but the verbal recount
of the creation process could fill pages. It wasn't
a musically inspired project, but he found his rhythm
while creating a display for the spinosaur. What I valued
in a school remained the same, but my interpretation
of emergent curriculum, integrated academics and hands
on learning shifted. We enrolled for the next fall.
My
son is now eight and is this year joined at school by
his five-year old sister. She doesn't have a strict
lineage of interests the way her brother does. She rarely
complained about going to preschool and certainly didn't
express that it was a waste of her time. While she is
strong and self-determined, she isn't so visibly pained
when her work of playing cheetah family is interrupted.
It saddens me to think that if she were my older child,
I might not have been motivated to find Clearwater for
her. She bypassed the kindergarten experiment as I have
learned that my children don't have time for the "this"
that traditional school offers and requires of them.
They will tailor their own education at The Clearwater
School, learning exactly what they want and need to
know without having to give up their passions.
Reprinted from the November
2001 issue of The
School Bull, the newsletter of The Clearwater
School
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