Man, kids are stupid. I suppose we learned in IR about the same thing happening among adults, but I've yet to witness it.
It all started when I began volunteering at my kid's kindergarten. I teach English there twice a week. After a month the kids "know" how to say:
Hello, my name is _______
Bye bye
Red
Blue
Green
Yellow
White
I like _________
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
By "know" I mean some of them remember the words sometimes, there’re a few bright ones, but mostly they repeat after me. I demonstrate the colors to them by showing them bowling pins; each pin is a different color. I've counted by counting off balls in the past. Today I decided to make things simpler by just counting off the pins instead of balls. Think that worked?
"How many pins am I holding up?"
One kid shouts "Blue!"
Then the rest chime in "BLUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
"No no, how many pins am I holding?"
One kid shouts "Holding!"
Then the rest chime in "HOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOLDIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
Enough of that, time for a new game. I put three of the pins on top of book cases in three corners of the room. I said, "let's go to the blue pin!" and jogged over to the blue pin. They got the hang of that pretty quickly. Problem was, sometimes they went to the wrong pin. As soon as one kid started running, they all followed him, irregardless of who the kid was (not the same leader every time). And you might say the rest figure he knows which color is which so they follow. You'd be sorely mistaken if you thought that, because get this: my daughter followed the group to the wrong pin as well! She knows very bloody well which color is which! Can you believe that?
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5 comments:
What I can't believe is that you used the non-word, "irregardless."
Please, Mr. English Professor, stick to the word you meant, "regardless."
WV: subpr. How I'm feeling.
Irregardless's a joke word I like to use; I've done is several times on this blog and it usually manages to press somebody's button (Rachel).
"Irregardless's"
Now there is something brand new, the possessive form of irregardless.
So what steps will you take to introduce independence and critical thinking to the next generation of Lithuanians?
I let them choose what color they like.
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