So, Screecher
Creature Number 1 started Senior Infants back in September. Or Naionain Mhora, as he attends a Gael
Scoil. The parent teacher meetings
happen in November which came as a bit of a surprise to me last year. He was only in school for a paltry two months
and it was beyond me how Muinteoir could get the measure of 28+ kids in that
short space of time.
He’s learning to
read at the moment. Oh, the fun. If Muinteoir knew the lengths I go to in
order to complete the allocated 10 minutes of reading practice each night,
Muinteoir’s job would be on the line.
See, our buachaill is a bright child.
He knows his tricky words off by heart and will recite them perfectly
with one eye on the page and the other on anything else at all.
I tried to trick
him. He’s dead against the mixing up of
his tricky words. Apparently, this goes
against the way Muinteoir does it. I
told him Muinteoir said he wouldn’t be able to do it, he wouldn’t know his
tricky words if it was done like this.
The boy is also quite competitive so this worked a treat. It was slower than reading them down in order
but after a few errors, he got it.
Last week I got
him to use his binoculars. Oh, the
lengths. I stood at the far wall and
pointed out random words as himself read them through the glasses. Another success.
Bribery also works
well. A favourite treat just within his
line of vision can be great encouragement.
Unless of course the two year old nabs it. Has happened.
Isn’t education
the best thing ever, all the same. They
are the best days of your life in fact.
Anyone else glare in utter disbelief at a parent who dared tell them
that. I am discovering, though, that
reading and maths are not the only things our eldest son is learning in
school. He has mastered the art of
giving the “ultimate wedgy” much to the outrage and frustration of the four
year old. He is the weak and defenceless
target. Farting and belching at will are
new and unlikely to come up on a school curriculum any time in the near or
distant future. This is not a
deterrent.
He derives great
enjoyment at administering a Chinese burn.
I’ve been the victim of a sharp and burning flick of his fingers – it’s
hard to see him coming sometimes.
Although he once attempted to flick the baby and he received a harsh
warning but I was unable to stop him the day he punched his baby brother “in
the nuts”. The child was wearing a nappy
so was well padded but he cried in pain and shock nonetheless. So did the perpetrator when I was finished
with him, I don’t mind telling you.
“Mammy, who’s Mr. Beaver?” he wanted to know
today.
I was
stumped. I asked for more
information. “All the girls like him,
Mammy. Erin and Abbey want to marry him.
They were fighting over him today.”
Ah, Justin BEIBER.
The lessons in life continue and will
for a long time to come.
.
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