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I remember in third grade, we were assigned to construct a mobile out of common household items. Nearly everybody else used pencils, small toys, and tacky jewelry. Mine was constructed of chicken bones, painted black, and strung with black thread on black sticks and twigs.
I wasn't being morbid or trying to make a statement (I was only 8 years old). It's just that we had had a big chicken dinner that weekend, and mom didn't want me cutting up any hangers. Also, I had only a spool of black thread and some Rustoleum 412 to work with.
But the teacher called the principal, who called the superintendent, who called the psychologist, who called my parents...
Ah, yes! Creativity abounds in the young child whose resources are limited at the time. When Matt did something he shouldn't one doctor suggested he not be allowed to play with his toys for an hour or so...Didn't bother him. He would play with a stick he had smuggled in under the bed or read a book (he read short chapter books at around 3). Corrective discipling that worked was to limit or ban books and DVD's for a period of time.
By the way, I think your mobile was quite fantastic! Recycling at its best! I've always required all of my students to make projects solely out of found objects to put them a bit more on a level playing field and to encourage creativity. They all bring objects to school and choose from what we have to create the projects at school. One little child made a solar system out of old CD's that his folks got in the mail as advertisements. It was the coolest project. Another constructed hers out of styrofoam balls she carved out of a large piece of packing stryofoam from a newly purchased product. (My son's grandma, the artist, used styrofoam packaging from old boxes to create jewelry for a play of Henry the VIII at a local college where she designed sets, etc.)
Matt's favorite colors have always been black, silver, and grey. It used to worry me, but not anymore. As far as clothes, shoes, backpacks, his only criteria was that the tags be cut out, they be comfortable, and they be in a color he liked. He didn't care about designer clothes (none of the family does) and for that our pocketbook was happy.
Matt, like me, has always been a champion of the "underdog." In kindergarten he had a fascination with vultures. Like your educators, his were all worried about this fascination. Finally, he'd had enough and told us all that we "should be grateful for the vultures because they are the vacuum cleaners of the world and without them we would all die of disease."
It's unfortunate that creative minds are stiffled and are immediately thought of as future "troublemakers" or "lunatics" in many settings.
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How glorious it is ? and also how painful ? to be an exception. --Alfred De Musset
Last edited by MOA on 30 Nov 2008, 10:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.