HOMEWORK
HOMEWORK
HOMEWORK: THIS MOM'S PERSPECTIVE
by Patricia Maurer
Blind parents face the same challenges as sighted
parents. Here Patricia Maurer brings us her
perspective on one
common to all--getting the children to do their
homework. Here
is what she has to say:
My husband and I are both blind. We have two
wonderful
children, David and Dianna. My daughter, who is
eight, does
not find her homework much of a chore. She
doesn't really
enjoy it--she just is rather indifferent about
it.
Our son, on the other hand, does anything he can
to get
out of it. The punishment and penalties continue,
but
sometimes the homework just doesn't get done.
I went to a public elementary school in a small
town in
Iowa. It was the only school in the community. I
was blind at
that time.
My friends, teachers, and parents read to me and,
in many
instances, wrote information down on paper for
me. I could not
read what I had written although I was taught to
print and was
taught handwriting. In the fourth grade I learned
to type on
a standard typewriter so that I could write and
others could
read it.
No one ever considered teaching me Braille
because there
was no one there to teach it to me. Each evening
my father
would read my homework assignments to me. Once in
a while he
would go to sleep reading, and I would wake him
up. He had
worked all day and was tired. He wanted to help
me and did,
but sometimes it was not easy.
Later in junior high or high school I learned
about the
Library for the Blind, and some of my textbooks
became
available on record. I listened to them on a
long-playing
record player.
I had a tiny amount of vision, and although I
tried, I
could not ever really effectively use large-print
materials.
But, oh, when those books came to me on record--I
not only
read textbooks but began reading novels. You see,
I had never
read many novels because there was never time for
anyone to
read them to me. I would occasionally check
something out from
the public library, but it took too much effort
to read it.
In high school I learned Braille. I spent an
entire
summer learning to read and write Braille. Now,
for the first
time in my life, I had a way to write something
down, and I
could read it for myself.
Although I did not have much confidence, others
in the
National Federation of the Blind, both by example
and just by
taking the time to talk to me, made me begin to
understand
that I could do more. I went to college, and boy,
did I read
and write. I studied all the time. Well, most of
the time. I
got a degree in elementary education and became
certified to
teach elementary and special education.
My first teaching job was in a small school in
Iowa
teaching reading to third and fourth-grade
children. These
children were sighted, and I was blind. I
remember talking
with the administration of the school and landing
the job.
When I got it I thought, now I have to figure out
how to get
it done.
I hired a high-school student to read to me. He
and I
made games, and I Brailled materials. The
children used print,
and I used Braille. It was a wonderful summer,
and I got a
contract for the next year. I took another offer,
and my
husband and I were married and moved away from
that small
town.
You see, I was thinking about my reading and my
homework,
because I am trying to figure out how to get that
boy of ours
to do his work. I want him to learn to love to
read, because
it is so important when it comes to learning and
living a
complete life. He's not blind. He can pick up any
book and
just read. It seems so much easier for him than
it was for me
when I was doing my homework.
But for now his books and homework pages
sometimes get
lost. The assignments seem very hard. He doesn't
want to read
them out loud so that we can help. He just wants
us to know
the answers. Soon, I hope he will begin to look
for the
answers and read the assignments. Because if he
does, I know
he will find at least some of it interesting.
I know there will be the nights when my husband
and I
nearly fall asleep helping the children with
their homework.
There are the nights that we are relieved just as
much as the
children because there is not much homework. I
believe that if
I ever go back to teaching I won't be able to
help the fact
that I now have a mom's perspective on homework.
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