bloodyrosemccoy: (Any Friends)
[personal profile] bloodyrosemccoy
I am having a whole lot of school flashbacks now that I'm here at the Space Place.

See, my basic job description is Tell Kids How Cool Space Is. Which is pretty great. But my coworker, the guy who tries to keep all us presenters headed in more or less the same direction, has pointed out that I am specifically good at telling gifted kids about space.

"Oh, that's common," my friend who is a bona fide teacher informed me. "You teach to your own type. It takes a conscious effort if you're teaching other types."

So I've embarked upon a crash course in figuring how to teach other types of learners. It is REALLY DIFFICULT, you guys. When I was a kid, a lot of the techniques teachers used in the classroom to try to drill some knowledge into our skulls struck me as patronizing, redundant, and stupid. My coworker assures me that had more to do with my own brain than the teachers', and that the techniques that simply annoy me--like making kids repeat vocabulary terms--are quite useful. I have no idea if that's true, because if it is my own brain, there's no way I can be objective. So I have to believe him for now and try to do a lot of education that seems to me to be counterintuitive. And I keep flashing back to being a kid who had to put with this nonsense.

It also reminds me of something that was a unique problem for a gifted kid--that unlike other types of special ed, having/being a gifted kid was seen as desirable. And that made it really hard to talk about the problems involved (like frustration with bafflingly obtuse peers,* social awkwardness, and boredom at school) without getting a lot of "CRY MOAR, EMOKID" responses. Even now, I am not sure if I should talk about my life experience because people think it's bragging, when I'm mostly trying to figure out why the hell life seems so different to me than it does to others. So the Space Place job has been surprisingly revelatory.

But! It's not all terrible! The cool thing is that we are also called upon to tailor our lesson plans for different learning styles--like, for example, GIFTED KIDS. Which means that my unique talents are useful! I offered to try finding resources to expand our current lesson plans for the kids with the same kinds of upside-down brains as my own. So I get to dig into gifted resources and try them out, and it's gonna be AWESOME. I may be weird, but at least I an use my weirdness to help other weird kids really enoy their Valuable Learning Experiences. And that's what's making the Space Place job so darn much fun.


*I must have been annoying as fuck as a kid, beause I simply didn't understand how other people couldn't grasp concepts that seemed so simple.

Date: 2014-11-12 09:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sriti.livejournal.com
Ok, so how is it assessed whether a kid is more intelligent than others? Do they take regular IQ tests at school for this? Also, if a gifted kid is studying in the same class as other kids with not so high an IQ, how does it matter if that kid is gifted or not? (Will get consistently good grades, yes, but besides that?) Does a gifted child graduate as the same time as other kids of that age? Does he get more preference at higher studies levels?

As you can see, I'm quite ignorant on this topic! But extremely curious!

Date: 2014-11-14 05:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] padparadscha.livejournal.com
IDEALLY, teachers and parents stay alert for kids who might be gifted while teaching; a lot of it is based on teacher assessment. If your school's lucky, you'll have a counselor trained in assessing learning differences, too. And there are also written tests, but IQ tests are really just rough estimates of a few specific abilities.

Giftednesss is a learning style, not just a measure of intelligence, so in a regular claim a gifted kid might get good grades but be bored, or just shut down and get terrible grades. But getting them the special ed they need isn't always easy--it takes money, resources, and teacher training, so often they're either left in regular classes or just moved up a grade our two, which doesn't always work because they don't have accelerated development in all areas. So is pretty complex! S lot of advocates are working on making it better, but there's a long way to go.

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