āThe smartest kid in class, by contrast, is not an expensive problem. A boy or girl who finishes an assignment early can be handed a book and told to read quietly while the teacher works on getting other children caught up. What would clearly be neglect if it happened to a special-needs child tends to look different if the child is gifted: Being left alone might even feel like a reward, an acknowledgment of being a fast learner.ā
When I came across that in a recent Boston Globe pieceon educating gifted kids, I had to laugh. Having once been the smartest kid in my public school class, I was anything but a cheap problem to fix; in fact, my parents ended up sending me to a private school to finish high school. Iām a great example of high intellect swamped by low expectations.
Fast-forward a generation to my own kidsā educations. You would think it would be better, but itās not. Gifted and talented programsāall the rage before No Child Left Behindāhave (if they still exist at all) become shock troops in the military boarding school approach to education weāve adopted. More seat work, more homework, no time for things like art and music.
Busy work is the bane of the bright childās existence. It teaches him to blow off his homework and rely on test-taking skills to get by. Moreover, it ignores developing the synthetic, intuitive parts of his brain, which are developedby studying art and music, and, yes, by daydreaming.
I have a friend whoās a classicist, living in penury as an adjunct professor. Iāve often thought that our school district should send three kids to her and pay her the roughly $65,000 it gets for educating them for a year. After four years, they would know history, music, the arts, Greek and Latin.
And before you tell me thatās not enough, America was built by people with exactly that education.
Message me if you want information about next yearās classes and workshops.