The Circle School Blog

An occasional thing

The Circle School Blog

“But how will my child know what she’s interested in if she never gets exposed to it?” This question has been addressed many times before, but I woke up this morning thinking about it, so here are my thoughts today.

Underlying this question is an assumption: “It is my responsibility as a parent to expose my child to worthwhile pursuits, and it is her opportunity to take them up or not.”  I believe this assumption is exactly upside down. More on that in a minute. There’s another, subtler assumption in there too: “Learning is for children.” Or maybe the more insidious “Children are for learning.” There is also an implication that the adult knows what this child ought to be interested in.

Let’s turn the tables, and imagine your own parents asking the same question – how will you, dear reader know what you’re interested in if your parents don’t expose you to new possibilities? I’m 49 years old. I’m sure there are some aspects of my life for which my mom still feels responsible, but lucky for me she doesn’t interfere in my grown-up life much.  But what if she did?

“Hey JD, wouldn’t you like to learn karate? Doesn’t that sound like fun?!”

You want me to learn WHAT?

You want me to learn WHAT?

“I noticed a spelling error on your blog. You know, Kaplan has some excellent spelling tutors, so I made an appointment for you next Tuesday.”

“I really want you to do well in your career, so I enrolled you in Penn State’s accelerated masters program in Chemistry. I want you to at least try it for a semester before you decide whether you like it or not.”

Gagging? That gag reflex is all about respect.  Imagine your parents treating your life-long education like most of us treat our children’s primary and secondary educations! Yuck.

Why is it so obvious to us that grownups can find their own interests, but we think our children require a continuous loop of educational options paraded in front of them? With our adult friends (where respect is not optional), we enthuse about our own interests without expecting others to try them, and without assuming responsibility for others’ growth and learning. We can approach our children respectfully, too. Not only will it not deprive them, it will free up much-needed interpersonal space for them to grow into their best selves.

Back to the upside-down assumption I started with, in which parents feel responsible for presenting their child with learning opportunities. Flipped around, it goes: It is the child’s responsibility to search for passionate interests, and the parents’ opportunity to share their own interests, as friends do. In short, You are not responsible for finding cool stuff for your child to do (or like or learn)! Anyway, you can’t be responsible for that. You simply cannot divine what any given child needs to learn for her future life unless you have a direct line to an omniscient deity. School officials can’t, either. Who decided that a well-rounded education includes memorizing state capitals but does not include how to prevent a microphone from squealing?

I personally think that no one can claim a well-rounded education until they’ve held a durian fruit (carefully!), tasted a fresh kumquat, and enjoyed mango mochi on a hot day. (Right now you may be glad I’m not the curriculum director for your local school district.) Even though I want my children to be well-rounded, I would not say to my child: “Let’s go to the Asian grocery so you can learn about kumquats!” I would go to the Asian grocery because I love mochi or because I need a new rice cooker, and I might invite my child to come along, if it’s convenient. If he comes, I’d let him to explore a bit, and see what he is drawn to. He might find something amazing that I never noticed before (this happened a LOT in import stores when my kids were young).  I would of course offer to share my mochi on the way out.

Learning is not for children; learning is for people. I’m sure my mom thinks she knows what I ought to be interested in, even at my age.  But it’s my life, not hers. Always has been.

-JD Stillwater