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we are connected with families for several years, ushering all their children through. Since I've had their older siblings, too, for many families we already know each other, already have a good working relationship, and it keeps the year running smoothly for their kids. I also get frequent updates to be sure my former students are doing okay in high school. :)
That can be hard, sometimes, too. Two years ago we had a boy in crisis; we met with parents, we hooked him up with counselors, we tried everything we could think of to put him in a positive place, but he had a massive chip on his shoulder, some really severe anger issues, and we, his parents and the school staff, knew his first year in high school was going to present challenges. It did. He's currently in a live-in rehab program. I taught his older brother, who's fine, and am currently in my 2nd year with his younger sister, who is also doing well. Mom cried at the conference, though. We didn't mention the boy, but I think she needed to talk about him with people who knew, and would understand. The sister's conference was fine; she's doing very well, there are no concerns, and we talked about a couple of future scheduling conflicts for her. She was patient with her mom's need to talk about her brother.
I had two conferences yesterday in which there was some sibling comparison happening; it was a good opportunity to clear the air. In the first, the older brother was comparing himself negatively to his younger brother; both are my students. Both of them are highly intelligent, friendly, polite, and just great people. The older boy, though, has unmedicated ADHD and the organizational and focus issues that go along with that. He's generally successful anyway, since we have support systems in place for him. He commented that he wished he were "smart" like his brother. It was actually a good opportunity to clear that misconception up. His parents, of course, have told him over and over how smart he is, but he didn't believe them, because he struggles with some things while others don't. When his teacher told him, though, he was surprised. Apparently hearing it from the "expert," instead of from parents who love you anyway, made a difference.
The second was with a younger brother whose older brother has moved on to high school. His older brother is a model student. A voracious reader, always a 4.0, never had trouble getting assignments in on time, etc.. A golden boy. That's not why I loved him; I loved his humility and kindness to others. His younger brother, though...is smart, kind, and less driven to succeed. He often let's things slide, and then gets overwhelmed trying to catch up. At his conference, his parents were updating me on his brother's successes in high school. They weren't upset about the younger brother's "okay, but not great" progress report. But he was. I saw on his face, when they were talking about his brother, that it bothered him. So I stepped in with a story about MY younger son; about how he went out of his way to keep people from comparing him to his brilliant older brother, which is true. When I did, I saw his parents nod, and he sat up and looked more alert. Then I looked him in the eye and told him that, while I loved his brother, that didn't mean he was perfect, and that there were some things that HE was better at than his brother. He actually said, "You're kidding, right?" I wasn't. I listed them for him, and reminded him that he didn't have to be his brother; he just needed to be himself; that we all loved him that way.
I guess it's not really common for teachers to tell their students that they love them, lol, but they understand it in context, when their teacher has been a partner with their family for several years.
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