Long tostory short: While theFor online lessons (because of the corona-lock-down lockdown) I had to built up muchput pressure to makeon my son to do his school tasks. Now the circumstances have relaxed. But we are stucked intostuck in the "pressure pattern" regardless of almost 2 monthmonths of holidays.
WhileAt the beginning of the Corona events our country madehad a full lock down. The schools easterschool’s Easter holidays were started one week earlier and after them my son had online lessons until the summer holidays. It is his first year in primary school. This means I have to sit next to him all the time he has online lessions via video-chat with his class.
So my tasks were to make him follow the teachersteacher’s commands, to focus toon the screen and to fulfill the tasks the teacher gave to him. The teacher madeput a biglot of effort in and givepoured all her heart and soul into it. Because of this I felt a big dutyobligated to "make" my son a good pupil.
The tasks he likes (for example painting/crafting, maths and allanything to do with general knowledge) were no problem. He was interested and stuckedstuck to the screen. But the tasktasks he did not like (even in IRL-School school, like writing) were a big struggle.
Because writing is an essential part of the documentation of every lesson, it was a problem all the day. I need to use more and more pressure, to get him write anything.
For example they had to write every fridayFriday for 30 minutes atabout one (over the week discussed) topic that had been discussed that week. It was not important how much they write, but thatfor each sentence the first letter was capitalneeds to be capitalized and in the end in a folstopfull stop. It was no problem for him to tell me all about the Lionlion, every bit of information. But he deniedrefused to write down anything. We talked about the first sentence he likewanted to start with, then the first word to write, then the first letter. He uses allmany strategies to distranctdistract me (and him) from the task: needneeding to use the toilet, getgetting thirsty, telltelling me all about the lion and about the last lessons, needneeding to sharpen thehis pencil and so on. After 30 minutes of discussion there were two words written: "The Lion".
I tried to limit the distraction. I sharpened the pencils, only one walk to the toilet, one glasglass to drink...
I tried to make compromisecompromises: one sip and one letter, one sip and one letter... or "you write one sentencessentence and I write the next" (because I had the impression that he feels very thwartthwarted by thehis slow writing in differencecontrast to his fast thinking). At some point he dodid not want to write anymoreany more and said this very directdirectly to me. I answered that I need to say this to the teacher, because she wantwanted to see the 30min writing outcome of the 30 minutes of writing (the school collected every friday the weeksweek’s work every Friday). He was upset, we argued and he cried (as I see it, because of anger). This repeated nearly every friday. MoreFriday, more often howthe longer the online teaching lasted.
Then the holidays started and we needneeded no pressure for school anymore. But now I observed that we are stuckedstuck in the learned patterns of behavior. If he dodoes not get something he wants, he starts to get loud. I startsstart to get loud even fast too. I hoped we could calm down and repair our behavior and relationship, but now the holidays are nearly goneover and the school will start again. Online lessons are not planned, but we need to do homework together and I am nervous, because I do not want to make the situation more worse.
My aim would be: Find a way to do the homework calmcalmly and with less stress for both of us. Homework means writing, equal with whichthe topic it is connected with.
Please ask, if you need more information...
Why does he not like writing? I do not know it for realcertain but I have some assumptions. I believe at one hand he is impatient. He likes to tell stories a lot, but to write them down is totoo difficult when one could send voice mails instead. At the other hand heHe is also a boy and a little more than 6 years old. His motoric so his motor skills are not this fartoo developed, so writing is exhausting for his muscles. This is one reason I started to treatreward his effort like "When you wrotewrite the first sentence, I will write the others". But he is not dyslexic I think, because he could write on a keyboard and sometimes like to dolikes doing it. (We do so at any ocassionas much as possible, to train even the convert-sound-to-letter-skill, like writewriting via messengerMessenger to thehis grandparent). The "fail""failing" worry could be an option now, because I have to tell the teacher about the problems. But this is not wanted, neither by me nor by the teacher. We both want to help him and treatreward any effort he does.
NeedDoes it need to be handwriting? The problem I ask forI’m asking about is handwriting. One part of the homework (like last year) will be 10 words per week that have to be written three times each. ThisThese words then on fridayFriday will be dictated by the teacher as a test. We use a keyboard whereverwhenever it is allowed.
How was the situation before the online lessons? He was very slow in writing, but this was (and is) no issue for me. He did his homework slowslowly with some distractions but without stress or arguing. I thought that he knowknew the need behind it, so he wantwanted to learn it even if it is difficult.