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April | The Narrative Nest's avatar

This is really something, and I think I need an ongoing class on it. If you created one, I’d have to sign up.

I was this child:

“In many classrooms, the children who are quiet, compliant, and undemanding are interpreted as coping well. They are the “good” children. The low-maintenance ones. The ones who do not disrupt.”

My daughter is loud, intense, and determined. Something I’ve mistaken for inappropriate behavior at times, rather than a child who fully embodies herself. I’m not always sure how to balance both of our needs. But I do find myself pulling back on lessons to assess things like overstimulation, big feelings, and connection.

I hope you continue writing more on this topic. Many of us need it.

Kimberly 🖋️ Rebuilt To Learn's avatar

Thank you for writing this and sharing your insights. The section on pacing and misinterpretation really resonated with me. Recognising readiness as a thing and moving away from school-based expectations is something that’s been top of mind for me for a while now. When we accept rigid ideas about developmental timelines, and children don’t meet them, it’s so easy to default to more — more input, more support, more intervention. But I’ve learned with my own kids that readiness doesn’t respond to volume or adult-imposed urgency. A child who isn’t ready to read, or speak, or engage with a particular concept, doesn’t become ready faster because more adults are involved.

Speech and reading seem to trigger the most anxiety for parents and educators because they’re so visible. It makes it genuinely hard to just continue providing rich input and simply wait for a child’s natural pacing to arrive. Although I still wonder, at what point do you start thinking about disabilities that do need extra support of intervention? I still haven’t resolved that tension yet.

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