I Hate School: How to Help Your Child Love Learning

I Hate School: How to Help Your Child Love Learning

by Cynthia Ulrich Tobias
I Hate School: How to Help Your Child Love Learning

I Hate School: How to Help Your Child Love Learning

by Cynthia Ulrich Tobias

eBook

$4.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

Includes tips for home schoolers.What do you do when your child hates school?When little Sarah cries herself to sleep at night, when Johnny has tummy aches in the morning, something is clearly wrong. An occasional problem at school is one thing. But what do you do when school is the problem? When your child hates school because school doesn’t like your child, you’ve got to act. Don’t let a one-size-fits-all educational system steal the joys and riches of learning from your son or daughter. Your child is unique, with a personal learning style that needs to be understood and respected. In this groundbreaking book, learning expert Cynthia Ulrich Tobias shows how you can work with your child’s school and teachers to tailor an education your child will love, not hate. Here are practical ways to craft an approach that draws out your son or daughter’s giftedness and minimizes the things that frustrate.Filled with practical applications and insights as commonsense as they are revolutionary, I Hate School includes a Learning Styles Profile Summary on which to base your plans and actions. So don’t waste time. Today, starting now, you can take steps toward an education for your child that will replace the words “I hate school” with “Is it time to go to school yet?”

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780310877363
Publisher: Zondervan
Publication date: 08/03/2010
Sold by: HarperCollins Publishing
Format: eBook
Pages: 208
Sales rank: 878,442
File size: 857 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Cynthia Ulrich Tobias is founder and CEO of AppLe St. (Applied Learning Styles) and coordinates education and commerce programs throughout North America and internationally. She is a speaker and the best-selling author of several books including Every Child Can Succeed, Bring out the Best in Your Child, Do You Know What I Like About You? and You Can’t Make Me (But I Can be Persuaded). She lives near Seattle, Washington.

Read an Excerpt

I Hate School


1 School: The Shoe That Needs to Fit
'Why do so many children now struggle to learn, especially when it comes to particulars like detailed directions, rules of grammar and spelling, and math facts? We need better explanations than naming and blaming our children for having deficiencies. Could it be that to a degree, our mind-set and educational format have outlived their usefulness? Every day we expect children to adapt to our way of thinking. Is it time to update our thinking and be more open to the potential of theirs?'
---Lucy Jo Palladino, The Edison Trait
I was standing outside the Chip 'n Dale play area at Disneyland, watching as the children inside screamed with delight, enthusiastically jumping and racing around. One father who stood beside me seemed agitated, and kept calling out to his son, trying to get him to calm down. After several attempts to get his son's attention, the dad turned to me with an exasperated look on his face and said, 'See what we get when he's off his Ritalin?'
I must have looked more surprised than supportive, because he quickly moved away so he could retrieve his son. I wanted to remind this frustrated father that this was Disneyland---a place where kids are expected to be excited and energetic.
The sad truth is that more and more children are expected to be calm and obedient regardless of the circumstances, and the diagnosis of and medication for learning and attention deficit disorders is becoming more and more popular, even for very young children. Recent studies have shown that seven to ten percent or more of America's school-age children are being prescribed stimulant drugs to control their behavior, and the actual figures may be higher. The percentage of boys being drugged is disproportionately large and probably reaches or exceeds fifteen to twenty percent. Some drug advocates believe that eight million of America's children should be taking some kind of psychiatric medication. For 1997 the DEA authorized 13,824 kilograms [of Ritalin], an increase of more than seven hundred percent since 1990.1
When my first book, The Way They Learn, was released over ten years ago, it was received with great enthusiasm. Parents and teachers all over the world embraced the idea of discovering each child's individual learning strengths and focusing on strategies for bringing out the best in each student. These learning styles include traits that can be very inconvenient for a standard classroom or an intolerant adult. Many children need movement and physical activity to be at their best; others need to verbalize their thoughts and talk their way through tasks. Virtually all children need to experiment with the discovery process of learning---and that can be messy. Strong-willed children challenge authority to establish boundaries and parameters, and they seldom just meekly obey. As they grow through the different stages of their lives, children can be noisy and irritating and full of questions. They can annoy and frustrate adults who prefer to keep situations calm and stay in control. Anyone who is involved in working with children knows these statements are true. Unfortunately, many adults who do work with children seem to have forgotten that we cannot expect to effectively teach and nurture the younger generation if our focus is on keeping circumstances and outcomes convenient for us. Especially when it comes to education, we are not the customer---the student is the customer. And yet, in my almost two decades of working with parents and educators, there is a growing concern that instead of truly identifying and meeting the needs of students, society in general and the educational system specifically is choosing to medicate them into the kind of conformity that is most convenient for the adults who teach them.
There are children who have very legitimate physiological and neurological disabilities. But for every one of those children, what if we're putting ten other normal but inconvenient children in the same group? The children who truly need the professional attention have their treatment diluted by those who suffer the fate of being misdiagnosed and categorized as learning disabled or behavior problems.
It becomes even more alarming when you consider the fact that once students graduate from their K--12 education, they usually get hired for the very things they got in trouble for when they were in school. Human resources managers have a few very consistent requirements, regardless of the type of position they are filling. The best applicants should have good social interaction, independent thinking skills, and a high energy level, among other things. If you think about it, we not only don't foster those traits in school, we often actively discourage them. If we are spending a great deal of time diagnosing and medicating students so they can conform to a classroom situation that becomes virtually irrelevant after it's over, what's the point?
I am not advocating a permissive and lenient education system. I do not believe we should lower academic standards or compromise when it comes to good behavior. I am totally committed to accountability. But what is it we are trying to measure? Have we actually asked and answered this important question: What's the point? If we simply demand that students do what we tell them and work hard because they have to, how many will want to keep on learning when the required formal education is complete?
When I take my children to the shoe store and the shoes don't fit, I can't change their feet. They do need to wear shoes, though, so we keep shopping until we find the shoes that fit their feet. What worries me about education is that from the very beginning we have offered very few styles of 'shoes.' When a child's foot won't fit the shoe we offer, we insist that the foot be changed. But what happens when you force a child's foot into uncomfortable and ill-fitting shoes and make him walk around in them? As soon as he possibly can, he takes the shoes off, vowing never to put them on again. I can't count the times I have had mature and capable adults come up to me when I was doing a corporate workshop and say, 'Look, I know I'm stuck in a boring, dead-end job---but I'd rather stay here forever than go back to school.' They remember quite well what those shoes felt like, and they have no desire to put them on again. Companies spend millions on training programs and many even provide financial incentives for employees to get college degrees. And yet so many adults have vivid memories of being in a classroom, feeling stupid or overwhelmed with tasks of concentration and memory they are ill-equipped to undertake. If the formal process of education is mostly a dreaded chore to be done or is tantamount to a prison sentence to be served, why should we be surprised when each successive generation becomes less and less interested in applying themselves to the task of learning? How can we justify making children suffer a boring and sometimes even painful educational experience if the end result is that they never want to learn again?
We do need educational reform, but most of all we need to remember who we are trying to educate. The students should be our first priority---each child should be considered an important and valuable customer who can potentially change the world for the better. We should keep our standards high, our academic goals clear, and our code of ethics strong. The point is, we need to teach kids to think, not just feed them facts to think about. That means we'll need to pay attention to the individual learning strengths and preferences of each student. It means we can't just put them through classrooms full of uniform fixtures and standard requirements and expect them to all come out equally proficient.

Table of Contents

Contents 1. School: The Shoe That Needs to Fit 9 Part 1: The Physical Environment 2. Sometimes School Happens at the Wrong Time of Day 19 3. Food for Thought 31 4. Let There Be Light 39 5. Make Yourself Comfortable 45 6. Some Like It Hot; Some Like It Cold 53 Part 2: Learning Styles 7. Look Who’s Talking 61 8. I See What You Mean 69 9. On the Move 79 10. What’s Your Focus? 91 Part 3: Surviving and Adapting to School 11. Who Needs Homework? 105 12. What Are We Testing? 119 13. Getting Along with Your Teachers 131 14. Redefining Diversity 145 Part 4: Changing the School, Not Your Child 15. Why You May Not Want to Be “School Material” 155 16. Convincing Teachers to Try These Ideas 167 17. What about Educational Reform? 179 18. Choosing the Right School for Your Child 187 Appendix: Learning Styles Profile Summary 195 Notes 201 Learning Styles: An Annotated Bibliography for Educators 203
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews