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“Let me show you a BETTER way.”

Posted in Homeschoolins, The Slappening, homeschoolin: ur doin it wrong by Smrt Mama
Feb 03 2010
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I think I’ve figured out the crux of Captain Science’s issues and it mostly comes down to the above statement. Captain Science always thinks he knows a better way to do things, and when his way isn’t actually better, he has a very difficult time accepting it. The roots of this are buried pretty deeply in his psyche, so I’m not sure how we’ll dig them out, if we even can.

I’ve seen a lot of chatter on the WTM forums lately about the difference between “gifted” and “just bright.” Several people insisted that giftedness comes down to “the way they think.” I am inclined to agree, because I’ve seen Captain Science’s brain working. He really does think differently and has a hard time relating to people who are more “inside the box” thinkers (or people who have difficulty getting the whole box of concepts immediately*). The upside is that it makes him a great abstract thinker and problem solver, when he applies his abilities confidently and diligently. The downside is that it has created an unwarranted sense of his own mental superiority, which manifests as the stubborn insistence that he can always, for every subject or activity, find a “better” way to do it. He’s also constantly on the search for shortcuts, even if those “shortcuts” end up requiring 10x the amount of work as just doing it the normal way.

We saw this a lot when he was little. When Officer Daddyman would teach him martial arts, he would usually respond with, “But I can show you a better way to [roll, stand, kick].” Eventually, he did have to acknowledge that, at five or six, he really didn’t have the knowledge to school the 4th degree black belt in martial arts, but before he could get to that point, there was a lot of headbutting and chest pounding (mostly on his part, as Daddyman isn’t generally going to dignify the young monkey’s attempt to show up the big gorilla).

We’re seeing it now with math, and today it proved to be the trigger for his absurd display of hissydom. He is perfectly competent in mathematics and math foundations, so the last two days, when he suddenly couldn’t do multiplication correctly, we knew something had to be up. Apparently, he decided he could develop a better (and more importantly, faster and easier) way to do multiplication. He would only do multiplication in his new “better” way, despite the fact that the answer came out wrong every single time. The more someone tried to demonstrate that his new method wasn’t working, the angrier he became, until suddenly, he went utterly nuclear. How dare we, the simple-minded parents of his great and hideous oppression, try to act like we knew better than he? How dare we say his way wasn’t hands down the single biggest mathematical innovation EVER in the history of the world?

I’m not exactly sure what to do about this. I’m glad he wants to try new methods, but insisting they’re the right or best ones, when they obviously aren’t, has got to stop. Captain Science is probably too aware of his intelligence, which was partially avoidable (too much praise from family and teachers, too involved in his own test scores during the grade skipping and gifted class testing process) and partially unavoidable (when you’re in a class environment, it’s really not hard to compare yourself to other children, and see that your capacity or performance is different from theirs). I do think that homeschooling will help somewhat in that respect, though — instead of being the gifted kid in a mainstream classroom with diverse ability levels, he’s one several. If Eclectic Girl’s math abilities don’t poke a little hole in his delusions of grandeur, then nothing will. I also hope that being with other highly intelligent children, working on higher-level work, will start encouraging him to rise to the challenge more, rather than finding short cuts.

I agree with Patchfire when she says an IQ of 300 doesn’t matter if all you do with it is sit around and play video games. “Gifted” may describe a certain, special way of thinking, but what does that really matter if the result is a smug attitude and the constant search for cheats and shortcuts? I was a “gifted” student, too, but by high school, I was cutting so many corners in order to put in as minimal effort as possible that I was performing at a significantly lower level than the “average” students in my classes. By college, I was making no effort at all, and I’d managed to functionally dumb myself down through sheer force of “couldn’t be bothered.” The brain is like any other muscle, and if you don’t exercise it to its full capacity, it starts losing that capacity and getting mushy. I don’t want that for Captain Science.

I’m happy for him to look for a better way to do things. I don’t want him thinking his way is automatically going to be better, simply by virtue of it being his way. I definitely don’t want him falling out with the red ass any time someone points out his way isn’t an improvement over the original way of doing things.

*When Captain Science was three, his preschool teacher told me about an incident in the classroom where his frustration with another classmate’s difficulty in mastering the colors came to a head. Nick had incorrectly identified something blue as green, prompting Captain Science to say, with great exasperation, “It’s blue, Nick. B-L-U-E, blue. Not blew like the wind. Blue like the color.” A warning sign of trouble to come?

Tagged as: gifted boolie holies, gifted homeschoolers, giftedness, wtf wednesday
Trackbacks
  • Weekly Reviewins: Week 23 » Smrt Lernins says:
    February 5, 2010 at 5:33 PM

    [...] each time. Earlier in the week, it was because he was trying to solve the problems using his “better way” of doing math. Today’s problem just seemed to be that he remembered how he worked the [...]

Comments
  • Heather:

    I had a discussion about this with a friend’s child who is the gifted program in a local school system. He told me that his mom had held him back from entering it for a year because he wasn’t ready. I asked him how he felt about it. He said he was okay with it because he got to relax more until third grade.

    (His parents were also gifted kids.)

    We talked about being gifted isn’t something that makes you special or you earned – it’s just something you were born with. It’s all about what you do with it. While I hope my kids are super-geniuses (who doesn’t?), I want them to be capable and hard workers. However, they’ll have to overcome my deep love of slacking. :)

    Reply February 4, 2010 at 8:42 AM
  • Rivka:

    I wonder… would it help to de-personalize the situation by encouraging him to invent systems for testing his new ideas? Maybe tie it into the scientific method, or reading biographies of inventors, or finding an engineer for him to talk to, or something.

    It sounds like he gets very upset about someone else judging his invented methods, because he has so much invested in them. If he could be helped to think of it as a three-step process – first you come up with an idea, then you test it, and THEN you use it – and he gets to be in charge of all three parts, it might lessen the sting of being wrong.

    Reply February 4, 2010 at 3:34 PM
    • Smrt Mama:

      That’s a helpful and potentially very productive suggestion! See, that’s why I blog, so that others can solve my problems for me. I think this is a good plan.

      Reply February 4, 2010 at 4:22 PM
      • Rivka:

        Oh good. I hope he’s receptive to the idea. I’m a researcher by training and profession, so I’ve spent the last 15+ years in an environment in which the natural follow-up to “that’s an interesting idea” is “…how could you test it?” In that environment, there’s no sting to it at all.

        I guess the only thing I would add is to be careful to also suggest it in situations in which his tests will probably support his idea, or he’ll figure out pretty quickly that “how could you test it” is a code word for “your idea sucks.” ;-)

        Reply February 5, 2010 at 10:18 AM
    • Daisy:

      Agreeing Rivka, That is awesome stuff!

      Reply February 4, 2010 at 7:11 PM
  • Ariana:

    Rivka’s idea is brilliant. I was thinking too of having a certain time set aside for him to come up with, test, and refine his ideas. New ideas could be put in place once he’s shown mastery of the old/slow/boring way of doing things and shown that his new/awesome/brilliant way is viable.

    I know I came up with a “better way” for doing math when I was in the 3rd grade. I think it was for subtraction. It seemed to work and my teacher was actually pretty cool with it but I think my mom was afraid of it so she told me to do it the “normal” way. Now I don’t remember my brilliant idea anymore. :-( That’s my way of suggesting that you and/or Captain Science keep a notebook recording all these ideas.

    Reply February 6, 2010 at 2:46 PM
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