Friday, June 13, 2014

Heavy weight....

I always knew being a parent carried a tremendous amount of responsibility. But this week, the weight of that responsibility is heavy. We have news to share with our son that we are not sure how he will take. At first glance it seems devastating, crippling against the piles of accomplishments he has achieved in school this year. This news seems to totally defeat all those strides. At the same time, the news takes those strides into account and sees the bigger picture of the future. As his mother, my heart breaks under this weight. Our little boy is not being promoted to 6th grade and is being asked to repeat 5th grade.

Sure, there are worse things, many worse things. But my heart is totally breaking over this. We expected it and I kept cool during the meeting, just a few tears in the corner of my eyes once (especially as his teacher showed her emotion over it all). But now, my cheeks are drenched as I consider what his reaction might be like. I keep trying to gauge what it might be and I am at a loss.

You see, this boy is one of the most thoughtful boys I know. He has love in his heart bigger than himself. He is conscientious and caring and sensitive. And I know how hard he worked this year, not only academically against so many learning challenges, but emotionally. He had not sat in a school classroom since kindergarten. He spent the last 4 years at the kitchen table with me. He had to integrate his shy, introverted self into a classroom. He had to make friends, develop peer relationships and overcome tremendous anxiety. And he did just that. It took him more time than most, but he is a deep part of his class and feels comfortable with them. Best of all, he did it with a smile on his face.

That is the hardest part of all of this. It is easy to look at the academic side of this and totally see how much he can benefit from one more year at 5th grade with his awesome teachers. He has deep learning challenges and made tremendous accomplishments in this year. The teaching staff feels like one more year under his belt at this level will be the push he needs to move on into the later grades and do the tougher work. I have to agree with this; which is what makes it even more difficult. But when you consider how hard he worked to build friendships and relationships and now will be asked to sort of do that all over again, my heart sinks.

But as I sat here typing this, tears streaming, I also was flooded with the sheer amount of resilience that this boy has. He has proven that over and over. And just when we thought we knew how something was going to go or how he would handle it, he proved to us otherwise. I was prepared for headaches and fights and tears trying to get him out the door each morning for school and then again in the evening to make homework a reality. But I was proved wrong. He happily got ready for school, without complaints, every day this school year. He did his homework each night, almost, no questions asked. He read the required amounts of reading each week, willingly. 

These things can be attributed to many things, but I feel mostly to his personality. And secondarily to the school he attends. He is attending a local public charter school in our district. From day one, I felt discouraged about having him attend there. The school is very academic. He has some significant learning delays and I think, honestly the school was wary about that. But we felt like it would be a good fit for him so we pressed on. And his love of reading and joy for school has surely been built by the learning environment in this school. The founders and all the teachers have such a love for learning and collaboration and it has surely carried over into our son. The school is also set up in such a way that it is a fairly normal thing for someone to move up a grade or stay back in a grade more often than in a traditional school. They employ a very individualized plan, meaning you learn at the level that you are on, taking into account that every student learns differently and at their own pace (this is what the school was founded on). The classes (grades) are also not numbered, each grade has a name, so rather than be called 5th grade, they are known as Elms, or Willows, or Mighty Oaks. 

This is the biggest talking point, really: To think last year at this time, books were his enemies….and now they are a treasured friend. He despised writing because it was extremely difficult for him, but now has found a confidence along the way, instilled by love and dedication his teachers have poured into him (and each student they teach). 

My hope here is that through all of this, that he doesn’t feel like his accomplishments are not adding up or that they are not worth anything because he has to repeat a grade. And I hope he can see that we want nothing but the best for him; because it is only through these accomplishments that we are talking about all of this. We have the summer to keep working on certain skills and a chance for promotion to 6th grade in the fall.

But as hard as it is, I am embracing this idea. I don’t like it and don’t really want to have it happen, but I want my son to succeed in school and not always feel like he doesn’t measure up. For now, this appears necessary for success. It has taken me several days to get to this point, many thoughts and ideas swirling around in my head and many a tear shed. 

Here’s to hoping he surprises us once again….