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Re: Teachers Have Learning Disabilities--Not Students!
Posted by hmmm on 8/02/07

    what i'm hearing you type is that all people have the same
    capability to learn, and that's simply not true.

    sounds like you've been reading "the secret".

    On 8/02/07, SuccessFriend wrote:
    > Brilliant is the correct terminology. Children are brilliant
    > because they have the potential to learn as much and as
    > quickly as any adult. Children are sponges. With the right
    > adult influence in their lives and the will to do it, they can
    > explore many possibilities. Intelligence is not a measurable
    > thing, although many try to measure it. Because the mind is
    > always expanding, your so-called intelliegence level changes
    > daily, as with every cell in your body. No one stays the same
    > unless they are not allowed to explore their brilliance.
    > Intelligence is more that memorizing facts and doing basic
    > mathematical operations. It involves intuition and creativity,
    > which every human being possesses. We do not allow our
    > children in America to feel capable because we are too busy
    > pointing out their weaknesses. When in fact we should be
    > focusing on their stregths. One may "appear" to be more
    > intelligent than the next, when in reality we all are unique
    > individuals. We all learn in different ways. We cannot
    > categorize ourselves as disabled because we are not presented
    > information in our appropriate mode of learning. Who are we to
    > judge? We are all uniquely brilliant, even if we don't believe
    > it. The reason I KNOW that I am brilliant is because I believe
    > it. The reason I KNOW every child is brilliant is because I
    > believe it. The children I encounter are brilliant because I
    > help them to see why they are uniquely brilliant. They were
    > created from the same material as Einstein, Bill Gates, Oprah
    > or any other successful person. We all come to the Earth on a
    > clean slate. Our beliefs about ourselves determine how
    > intelligent we actually become. Intelligence is not only in
    > the mind, it begins in the heart. If you believe you are
    > smart, then you are. You will begin to behave in such a way to
    > harmonize with being a smart person. If you believe you are
    > dumb, then you will begin to behave in a "dumb" manner. Its
    > all about perception. I want to open all of our eyes as
    > educators to understand that ALL KIDS ARE BRILLIANT. The
    > future is full of possibilities. Look at Dr. Ben Carson who
    > was labeled special ed. Look what he has become just through
    > the sheer determination of his mother, who always told him how
    > smart he was. If you tell kids they are smart, they will have
    > no choice but to eventually believe it. But if you continue to
    > tell children that the person sitting next to them
    > is "smarter" because he passed the test with a 90&37; average,
    > then you are sending a strong negative message. You are saying
    > that some are born smart, and others dumb. That couldn't be
    > farther from the truth. Again, until you believe that you are
    > brilliant, how can you see the brilliance in any other human
    > being. We cannot sit around and judge others based on our own
    > DISability to see life as what it really is. People are all
    > the same in the core, and every person is full of
    > possibilities. It is when you believe that something isn't
    > possible that you give up on life. Let's not give up on our
    > children by labeling them and hinting around about Bell curves
    > and other antiquated psychology. We are in the information
    > age, not the industrial age. The education system is 40 years
    > behind, and it shows by the opions expressed by educators who
    > have little vision. Lets clear our goggles and see children
    > for what they really are---BRILLIANT!
    >
    >
    > On 8/02/07, hmmmm wrote:
    >> saying that all children are "brilliant" sounds to me like
    > saying that all children
    >> are "special." if everyone's special, then special loses
    > its actual meaning and
    >> negates itself, making no one actually special.
    >>
    >> imho, defining brilliant as "all children have talents" is
    > more accurate. but in
    >> terms of pure intelligence, i disagree. i see evidence of
    > the 'ol bell curve every
    >> year. not every student is intellectually brilliant, but
    > they all have a talent.
    >>
    >> On 3/28/07, Success Friend wrote:
    >>> Our children in America are being cheated in many ways. I
    >>> want you to first remember who is teaching our children---
    >>> children who have increased in age and who probably
    >>> received the same public education growing up. These
    >>> former public education students are now given the
    >>> label "teacher," because of a 4-year degree and a state
    >>> teaching licensure. No matter how "educated" a teacher
    >>> appears to be, it does not guarantee that he or she is an
    >>> effective teacher. An effective teacher is able to teach
    >>> well because he or she is constantly learning right along
    >>> with the students. Teachers have seemed to lose their
    >>> ability to learn. Why do I say this? Well, because
    >>> students are rapidly changing, so should our methodology
    >>> for teaching students must change as well. The students
    >>> you have this year are very different from the students
    >>> you taught 5 years ago. The truth is that EVERY student is
    >>> very different from the next. Therefore, an individualized
    >>> instructional plan is neccessary to help students learn.
    >>>
    >>> I believe that we are too quick to label our
    >>> students "special education" because of low performance on
    >>> standardized tests. I know for a fact that EVERY child,
    >>> regardless of his or her perceived disability is
    >>> BRILLIANT! Until we collectively as a community start to
    >>> believe in the brilliance of our children, then they will
    >>> continue to perform at a low capacity. We are too busy
    >>> looking for our children's disabilities rather than their
    >>> abilities. With that said, teachers should especially
    >>> believe in the brilliance of their students and treat them
    >>> as such. Just because little Johnny doesn't analyze
    >>> mathematical equations with the same accuracy as Jackie
    >>> doesn't mean that Jackie is more intelligent than Johnny.
    >>> It only means that Johnny has some other talent--like the
    >>> drawings he makes in his notebook that his teacher
    >>> repeatedly asks him to "put away." When you ask kids to
    >>> surpress their God-given talents and focus on some other
    >>> skill they have no enjoyment or interest in, then you are
    >>> creating an unhappy and unproductive child.
    >>>
    >>> Only until we start to learn how to adapt state standards
    >>> to a child's given talent, we will continue to subject our
    >>> children to hell in the classroom. It must feel like hell
    >>> to sit in a school for 6 hours a day and learn absolutely
    >>> nothing! The left-brain focused curricula of most public
    >>> schools neglects the right -brain potential of every
    >>> student. Every student can learn how to think. They first
    >>> have to believe in their brilliance, then learn to use
    >>> their talents to increase their knowledge and potential
    >>> for success.

     
     

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