Smart kids often have a tough time in school, but smart kids w/ learning disabilities, cognitive or behavioral eccentricities have to contend w/ a system that bundles them into a category defined by deficiency, expects little of them, forces their attention onto self-suppression
-
-
Ultimately — here's the tragedy — very few kids spend much time around adults who want them to be their best. They spend quite a lot of time, perhaps all of it, around adults who want them to be "normal," defined quite narrowly.
Show this thread -
Imagine what your life would be like if everyone around you expected you to behave exactly like a typical 6-year-old girl in all things, at all times, with failure eliciting looks of concern & horror. Imagine trying to think through anything properly while holding that mask up.
Show this thread -
It should obviously be easier for an adult to pretend to be a big child than for a child to pretend to be a little adult, and yet it's not difficult to see how much cognition & attention that task would continuously drain. To fail is to be seen as dumb, to succeed is to *be* dumb
Show this thread
End of conversation
New conversation -
-
-
Do you think it is possible to 'recover' from a cognitive deficiency? Just curious, not looking to argue.
-
Holt believes it's much easier for these kids to "recover" than for them to be considered "recovered." Whether he's right, I don't know enough to saypic.twitter.com/gqw9VOnJR7
End of conversation
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.