MOUNTING THE [SCHOOL] BARRICADES
Advocating for our Children

A proviso: The majority of teachers are caring, kind and dedicated to promoting the happiness and self-esteem of their students. They are usually underpaid, underappreciated, overworked, and continue in spite of that, because they love their profession.

Having said that, rare are the parents who have not, at sometime in the school lives of their children, felt torn between what they feel is their civic responsibility to be supportive of the teacher, and their gut instinct that it is their child who they should be supporting. If we can’t be perfectly balanced at all times, on the side of which should we err?

Everyone has his story to tell. I hope I can help a few parents by opening with one of ours, and the epiphany to which it led me.

One of my daughters, who I’ll call Sara, was only eight years old when we moved to a new city and she was in a new school, a little scared and insecure. I walked in one day and saw her gym teacher directing an aerobics line dance, with the girls, in the hallway. Sara didn’t move quickly enough for her, and the teacher roughly grabbed her by the shoulders and flung her around the side of the line, shouting at her to move faster.

I will never forget the look of shame and devastation on my daughter’s face. I will also never forget the look on the teacher’s face, when I went up to her, and said, quietly, “Don’t ever lay a finger on my daughter again.” I looked up and noticed the principal standing in the doorway. He had seen the whole thing, and it was clear from the look on his face, that he later gave her hell. Sara was apparently not her only victim, and some time later, she was fired.

As another school year looms on the horizon, I think of an issue that, in our lives as parents, should play one of the most intense and critical roles in raising children. It is a role at least as important as being sure that they eat healthy lunches, do their homework, clean up their rooms and make it to jazz or soccer practice on time.

It’s about advocacy.

The word “advocate”, like the French “advocat”, means “attorney”. And that’s exactly what we must be – attorneys for our children. There is nothing we can do for the school lives of our children that is more important than mounting the barricades for them.

Why “barricades”? Because sometimes that is exactly what a school feels like – a fortress, with concentric ramparts protecting the inner sanctum, that are composed not only of physical walls, but also of personnel (secretaries, division heads), of outside forces (parents’ committees, school board) and, most lethal of all, of ingrained assumptions and philosophies that may or may not be relevant to this century, to our philosophy, or – worst of all – to our children’s personalities.

There can be problems in any city, any country, and any educational system. No one is immune and no parent should be complacent.

I write this also on the backdrop of my 30 years experience in both formal and informal education. I recognize the frustrations that teachers face every day. Sometimes the pressure is crushing, and they get it from all sides. Teachers and principals are only people, and they make mistakes. But, like we learned in kindergarten, the best way to deal with a mistake is by, first, saying that you’re sorry.

By the time my children were in the higher elementary grades, I had formulated my own erudite philosophy about schools, and it went like this: “As long as the school doesn’t destroy my child’s self esteem, or his natural curiosity to learn, it will be enough for us.” Now, after our youngest graduated high school, I still believe that.

A sampling of things you can do to advocate for your child:

• Never tolerate any excuse for physical violence against a child.

• Never tolerate any excuse for a teacher to say something to a child that will make her feel degraded or stupid.

• Never tolerate any excuse for a teacher to embarrass a child because of what the teacher perceives to be a parent’s shortcomings.

• Never accept the excuse that your child is not being called on, or given a role in a school project, or tested for gifted programs because, “He sits in the back and is quiet”. Advocacy is not just about preventing wrongs; it’s also about getting your child the best education he deserves, and recognition of his strengths. An expert in giftedness once told me, “Giftedness is Special Education, no less than LD and AD(H)D.”

• Always believe your child. And if deep down inside, you have doubts, always tell him that you believe him, anyway. Many years after nobody will remember (or care) who threw that piece of chalk at the blackboard, your child will remember that you trusted him. And even if he didn’t “deserve it” that particular morning, it will (hopefully) become a self-fulfilling prophecy in the future.

• Never assume automatically that a bad teacher’s report means that there is something wrong with your child. Check out his behavior with other teachers, including those who teach art, gym, music and other “non-academic” subjects. Do some detective work to determine if there are other children in the same class receiving similarly negative reports. Maybe the problem is the teacher. (Sometimes an incompetent or emotionally abusive teacher will lead a whole class of parents to believe that the problem is only with “their” child.)

• If you believe your child has been treated unfairly, don’t hesitate to speak up. If you believe your child has been abused in some way, don’t hesitate to contact the principal, a lawyer, a clergyman, or the police. Even if the teacher apologizes, or the story is less serious than you thought at first, your child will remember that you pulled out all the stops for her well being.

• Always be respectful when interacting with teachers or with school officials. This is also a message to your child, one that only you can give.

And as for Sara? Today she is happily married with children of her own and with a degree in Special Education. One day last year, she said to me, out of the blue, “Mom, you were always ready to mount the barricades for us. Thank you.”

Being our children’s advocates, especially when we are young parents, demands courage, perseverance, and sometimes audacity, but it will pay off in their feelings toward us, and, even more important, in their perception of their own worth.

And it’s possible that an educator out there may learn something from you, in the process.

Author's Bio: 

The author is an educator, journalist, community theater director and the editor-in-chief of WholeFamily.com. She has taught and created special programs for students who are defined as mainstream, gifted and talented, at-risk, learning disabled and AD(H)D.