Today, when I walked across the football field to pick up my son from school, I saw something that almost made me scream out in horror; A teacher was bent down tying a child's shoelace. Now I am not saying teachers shouldn't help, however when a child is in grade 3/4?? Should he not have a minimal skill such as tying his own shoe mastered already? WTF is this world coming to when parents are such lazy a$$es that they cannot take the 30 minutes out of their lives it takes to teach a child of 8 or 9 to TIE HIS FREAKIN' SHOE?????
I am horrified at how few skills (considered basic learning) kids don't have at that age, I am not talking about your special needs child, or a child with a learning disability, I'm strictly speaking of your average intelligence child, who can achieve many great things when given the skills, that's all. We as are bringing up a nation of useless, skilless, underachieving children and we are not ashamed yet?? No wonder kids nowadays can do a perfect pirouette for ballet, wear the latest Roxy shoes and designer jeans, have parents that drive BMW's and Cadillacs, yet they cannot even tie their own shoelaces????
This type of parenting does not do your child any service. How hard is it to take the time to teach them a basic skill? It took us a couple of weeks to teach my son, he was 4 at the time. I taught another child in 30 minutes, because she was almost 7, she caught on much faster.
People need to stop treating kids like they are too dumb to learn, or hire someone to take the time to do the job. No wonder north America is failing as a whole. A society increasing in under educated individuals, because nobody takes the time to feed the beautiful minds of children. Children are like sponges, it is a saying everybody knows, they are not dumb, they are extremely capable. Take away the DS/Wii/Computer for 30 minutes each day, teach them skills such as taking turns, patience, simple math, conversation skills, manners, tying a bow on your shoe, and by doing all these things you are not only giving your kids basic life skills, you are giving them a foundation and even greater, you are showing them how much you love and care about them and their future.
I am not the best parent out there, and sometimes I fall back on parenting skills I picked up from my own parents, however, I refuse to think that my son is any less a intelligent human than I was. He has learned many skills that may seem ridiculous to teach a child of 7... he can sew a button, not greatly, but he'll never have to ask anyone else to do it for him. He can tie a good couple of knots and tie his shoes, he can swim (a work in progress), he can ride a bike and a scooter, he can read (he's on the 8th book of "The 39 Clues"), he can add and subtract, we play Yahtzee, the Game of Life, Stratego, and I'm learning to play Chess alongside him. I try to learn if I don't know, and if he asks I am honest and look stuff up for him or with him.
He is reading this post as I type, and he just announced that him and one other boy are the only ones in his grade one class that know how to tie their shoes. Dismal!!
He tied his own shoes last spring for NSD Basketball!! |
I will never underestimate my son's ability to learn! |
Cheers and have a great Father's day,
Viviana
One of my rants is the fact that schools are going to stop teaching children how to write cursive.... Now I will say WTH!!!
ReplyDeleteAll kids will need is their thumb?????
BTW....Come on over to my blog as I am having a Southern Belle Giveaway!!
Marilyn
I know Marilyn, it is a sad state of affairs this north american culture is is!
ReplyDeleteI will admit, my son was taught to tie his shoes by his teacher...but it was something taught and mastered by his whole kindergarten class. And it was one of the rare things that I did not have a hand in teaching him. By the time he was two, he could count far beyond 200 in English, 30 in French, 10 in Spanish, three in Japanese (though I will admit that Big Bird taught him that), could spell almost any word you asked him to (including xylophone), knew his ABCs, colours and shapes and could read fluently by the age of 3. It was a good thing he didn't know how to tie his shoes, or his kindergarten teacher would have had nothing left to teach him, lol! I find it sad that kids today can find the exact channel they want to be on, can find the website they're looking for, or know more about my cell phone than I do, but have no clue how to do basic things like tie their own shoes.
ReplyDelete