A
CONFIDENCE BUILDING EXERCISE As
a teaching assistant in the UK, you may have noticed that most children with learning
difficulties appear to have come to the conclusion that they are stupid!
In any school a child with learning difficulties experiences a huge amount
of failure. With sequencing difficulties, any form of writing or math/s is going
to present severe problems, and the child cannot fail to notice that almost all
of the other children are able to do the work which he or she finds so hard. Why
can't he read and spell? He must be dumb, thick, stupid. It's the conclusion that
anyone would reach in similar circumstances, and it badly needs changing before
any corrective teaching is going to be effective. However good our methods
with word games, phoneme awareness, and finding interesting books are, this basic
foundation for each child of a secure self-confidence has got to be addressed
before any real progress can be hoped for The difficulty with a learning
difficulty is that it is often not visible. If the child had a broken arm, everyone
would be rushing around giving extra consideration. 'Of course he can't write
- his arm is broken! There's nothing wrong with his intelligence.' But no-one
ever says 'Of course he can't spell - he has inherited a different pattern of
brain circuits! There's nothing wrong with his intelligence.' Teachers,
parents and the child come to the clear conclusion that he must be slow-witted.
What
I am suggesting is a little cognitive therapy by the teacher, if possible in conjunction
with the parent! Not as hard as it seems. The assumption in the child's mind -
that he is stupid - is inaccurate, and it needs correcting if he is to re-establish
the self-confidence he needs to learn. This is not going to be achieved simply
by telling him that he's as intelligent as the next person. Well-intentioned people
have been telling him that for years to no effect. He needs evidence, and he needs
to re-construct the picture he has of himself in his own mind. Only in this way
can he see his difficulties as a dyslexic learner in the proper context of a person
- like anyone else - who has both strengths and weaknesses. Most dyslexic
people have great strengths in the areas of physical co-ordination and/or creativity
and/or empathy with other people. His strengths may lie in some of these areas,
and he will know that lots of other children are weak in exactly these same areas.
The following exercise has a great effect on children, and can be carried
out by a parent, or a teacher, or, if at all possible, both together with the
child, who needs to be on his own (not in a group situation). Take a sheet of
paper and make two columns: in one column put 'Things I am good at' and in the
other 'Things that I am not so good at'
| Things that I am good at | Things
that I am not so good at | | | |
Take about five or
ten minutes of discussion with the child for you to write a list of things that
the child is - from an objective point of view - successful at. These will include
such skills as swimming, sports, caring for pets, making a collection, dancing,
drama, singing, art, painting, drawing, and so on. In the 'Not so good' column
let the child tell you the things like spelling and writing that he really finds
hard. The list will look something like this, depending of course on each child's
interests: | Things
that I am good at | Things that
I am not so good at | swimming diving
basketball looking after my rabbits drawing painting collecting
stamps getting on well with other children clearing the table making
people laugh softball being friendly to grandpa knowing about space
and the planets etc. | spelling reading writing math/s |
The evidence is staring
the child in the face: there are far more things that he is good at than things
he has difficulties with. He can't possibly be stupid. He is clearly a successful
person. But
he may well say that the things he is weak at are the things that matter in life.
If you can't spell, how can you pass exams and get a job? This is the stage at
which you have to argue - not tell - and say such things as 'What do you value
people for - because they are good at spelling? Of course not. You value people
for all sorts of qualities, especially their ability to be friendly, get on with
you, consider your needs, think of other people before themselves and so on. It's
up to you to keep the argument going until the child can really begin to see himself
in a new light - as a successful person who just happens to have been born with
a small handicap. Like being color-blind. It's not his fault. It's not because
he doesn't try hard enough (as, unfortunately, many teachers will have told him).
Seeing himself in a new light can be a turning point for the child - whatever
his or her age - and this new-born self-confidence can lay the foundation for
the special kind of learning he needs to build up the spelling and writing skills
that his fellow pupils find so much easier to acquire. But it's not
an over-night change, and it needs carefully nurturing over the coming month.
The list should be carefully preserved and pinned up at home in the kitchen for
all to see. He needs praise, gold stars, credits, and certificates over the coming
weeks for things he does in school - of a non-academic nature - which are commendable:
helping a new pupil to settle in, co-operating well in a games session, coming
up with a fresh creative idea for art, and so on. The certificates he receives
for these valuable activities may be the first he has ever received in his entire
school career. John Bradford Confidence-building
in practice
I
began this activity by talking about a new session my learners would be having
with me, which is Positive thinking. I modelled on the board my list and the children
called out ideas. At the beginning of this activity this particular learner said,
'I'm not good at anything'. My
reply was 'Yes you are. You are good at football'. This made him realise that
- yes - he can do things. With some discussion he managed to make a list. Things
that I am good at: Football
Running Drawing Helping my friends Things
that I am not so good at: Reading
Writing stories At
the end of the session he felt quite confident about the things he isn't so good
because I was able to bring to his attention that he can read just not as well
as he is wanting to at the moment. We talked about books he had read and group
reading activities where he sometimes helps other children with words like they
help him. The
following day it was group reading. He put his hand straight up to be the first
to read and he read steadily and more readily accepted help from the other children.
(S. B-W., Somerset, UK) Recognizing
low self-esteem
A
J is the typical 14-year-old boy—great athlete, “cool” with the girls, and loves
to clown around when the pressure is on. I believe that underneath that façade
what he projects is fear of failure in the eyes of his peers. During class he
appears to pay attention but, when he is called upon to answer something that
he is unsure of, he pretends not to have heard anything in the past five minutes.
This elicits
a classroom response of giggles, especially in English or history. Science is
a totally different matter, where he is truly interested, and is the first to
answer or ask questions about an experiment. History and English are difficult,
so he is frequently forgetting to complete assignments on schedule without constant
reminders. He wants his peers to believe that he is just as carefree as everyone
else and that school doesn’t offer any extreme challenges. (L.L.) |