If it was your son, would you care?
Have you looked into his eyes? My son's, I mean. The one who is having so
much trouble in your math class.
I have. When I help him at night, I see the frustration in his eyes when he
can't understand. I see him search my face, fearful of my disappointment, my
criticism when he gets the problem wrong after I've explained it so many times.
I see in his eyes the desire to give up. Around his lips I see the sadness
and creeping despair.
I watch the tension in his forehead as he tries so hard to understand. I
watch his fingers turn white as he grips his pencil tight with the hope that
this time -- this time -- the pencil won't betray him and will write the
answers correctly on the page.
Do you look at him in the classroom when you teach him? Do you look in his
eyes and see how the disappointment and frustration threaten to reach into his
soul? To break his heart? Can you see his failure harden into the foundation of
his character?
I ask you: Do you see how hard he tries? How much he wants to please? How his
self-esteem is crumbling each time he can't remember seven times eight equals
fifty six? He knows more painfully than you that he's tried to learn this five
hundred and sixty times and still forgets.
I see how hard he tries. I see it all. When I sit with him at night I can
barely continue with our homework session as I watch his freckled face struggle
to remember four times six equals twenty-four and my heart breaks into as many
pieces.
And so we try to joke and laugh. I tell him that people learn at different
speeds and different times. I tell him about his older brother who didn't learn
to read till he was eight and then, when it was his time, he learned to read in
only three months and went straight to the top of his class that year.
I tell him that some babies get toilet trained at one year, and some at two,
and some not till three or four but that you're not likely to see a
sixteen-year-old in diapers. And he laughs. I see his eyes brighten a little.
His forehead relax. And as he lets go of his tension he seems to focus more, to
remember better.
But still it is not enough. And I find myself hating the multiplication
tables for hurting my son. Division has become my enemy. Sixty four divided by
eight is simply more than I can tolerate. Eighty one divided by nine is more
than any nine-year-old should have to deal with.
And I sometimes blame you. Do you teach him well enough? Sometimes I'm angry
that you've criticized and made him feel bad. But then I think that you are
simply there to blame while I'm feeling so bad for my sweet little boy.
Do you know how sweet he is? My son.
Last night, we fought until he finally sat to do his math. Then we sat for an
hour and a half going over three times three equals nine, nine divided by three
is three. We put kidney beans on the table and made them into students in a
class, candies for each student, shekels for the store, all the things
that can be divided and multiplied, estimated and rounded. Sometimes we used a
calculator, anything to help him see the numbers again and again. Finally his
eyes turned red, his eyelids drooped and he said: "Ta, I'm too tired. Can I
go to bed now?"
Dressed in his pajamas he came to kiss me good night. "Y'know Ta",
he said, "I hate when I have to stop playing to do homework with you. But
then, when we do it, I like it so much I don't want to stop."
Do you know how much my heart jumped with these words, how hard I prayed last
night that you will give him a good grade on his math test this morning?
To tell you the truth I don't care if he does the problem right or wrong. It
wouldn't bother me at all if just for today seven times eight equaled fifty-four
or fifty-two or fifty-six or forty-eight. As far as I'm concerned two plus two
doesn't have to equal four if it means that my son will feel good about himself,
if he'll want to continue trying, if he'll begin to think of himself as smart
and courageous and capable.
Is five plus five really ten? Could it not be twelve just once for the sake
of my boy? For the sake of his well-being? Does math care if it is done
correctly, or is it only you? Would the numbers take offense, or is it only your
rigidity that forces five to be the impossible answer to two times two? Are
these numbers worth a life? A future?
Do you ask yourself these questions when you grade his test?
If you looked in his eyes you would? If you loved him you would?
Because, you see, love is strong enough to allow five times zero to be five
instead of zero just this once.
If it was your son, would you care?
I don't ask you to love my son as I do. Nor that you grade his papers
unfairly. I want him to do his math correctly and to understand the importance
of exactitude in all things and ways.
Only please, look into his eyes. While the numbers may not change, the way
you teach him might. Though his answers may be flawed, you'll see that his heart
is not. Though it may take time for him to learn, you'll see how very hard he
tries. And when you grade him -- do it in such a way that only the numbers are
judged and not the boy. Five plus five may always be ten, four times four is
always sixteen, but just make sure that whatever he writes, my boy does not add
up to zero in your eyes or his.
-- a loving father