Raise Your Glass
At the
start of summer we received my son’s school report. End of Year 4 in the
primary school, he’s ten years old. His marks per subject were pretty much what
we had expected – very strong academically, just getting by in activities. But
the overall commentary the teacher had written came as something of a shock. He
was described as something of a sociopath (my word, not the teacher's) – "needed to be more tactful, uncooperative, a loner".
We thought this might have been mentioned during the school year, at parent
teacher meetings, in notes home to us, but it hadn’t.
I know my
son pretty well. He’s a chip off the old block. Very attentive to detail,
studious but impatient, strong with figures and language but reacts badly to
criticism, mediocre at sports, not too interested in investing energy in
friendships. A bit of a lone ranger. Well, as they say here in Ireland, he
didn’t lick it off the stones. He and I, we may well both be somewhere on a behavioural
spectrum but life has been, is and will continue to be good. After a few minutes
of “that’s my boy” I asked my wife to pull out the previous year’s report.
The
individual subject performance was virtually identical, although it had been a
different teacher. The overall commentary was full of positivity, encouragement
and hope. But it said exactly the same thing as this year. Except that, for
last year’s teacher, the glass was half full. This year’s teacher was a glass
half empty character. We asked our son what his opinion was of the teacher this
year versus last: “She didn’t like me, the one this year. Last year’s teacher
was much nicer.”
So, when we
received a bad behaviour note home (a rare event) in week three of the new
school year from the new teacher, we were on the case. He and another lad were
accused of being disruptive during a visit to a local secondary school – one he
might attend in two years’ time. When we took him to task over the note he
denied the misbehaviour and insisted it was a misunderstanding or a case of
mistaken identity. Discreet enquiries at the secondary school (which his elder
sister attends) suggested he hadn’t been any rowdier than the other thirty kids
in the room. We met with the new teacher and she said the note and punishment
(confiscation of all points earned for good class performance) was based upon
his admission of guilt. He had already told us he had admitted to whatever to
avoid confrontation and embarrassment. Another story was related where the teacher had opened the last few lines of his homework poem up to the class of thirty ten-year-olds for improvement and he had "clearly felt uncomfortable about accepting constructive criticism".
We all smiled, nodded and decided to let
life go on, no serious issues. By the end of the week we were receiving worried
phone calls from other parents about various notes sent home and punishments
meted out. A new teacher straight out of college. Strict disciplinarian. At
least we know where we are. Glass half empty.
Last
Saturday my son and I competed at the Best of the Best martial arts competition
in Dublin. It
was his first time and he won a gold medal for weapons (sai dagger form
performed to Animals by Martin
Garrix) and a bronze for points sparring. I was beaten 7 – 4 in sparring by a
veteran black belt, enough said about that. As we got into the car to head back
to Kilkenny my son said it was the best day of the year so far. I asked what he
had enjoyed the most and he said the sparring bronze medal was his highlight as
it was more of a challenge. He wants to compete in divisions where he has to
push himself to achieve success. His glass is (at least) half full.
When half
full meets half empty, two worlds collide. How full is your glass today?
C'mon and raise your glass.
Comments
Aside: my dad, when a teacher, had a favourite report comment to use in certain cases: "Absent-minded when present. Often has the presence of mind to be absent."