Tag Archive for: Learning

He’s the child found dead-center in this photo, almost crouched down.

A girl in a sky blue wheel chair sits to his left. Another girl with a navy blue towel around her shoulders sits to his right.

He’s the shirtless one with orange hair.

He was nine the first time I met him. He was eleven the last summer I spent with him.

He was only a few years older when his body gave out and he died.

I haven’t seen him in over 35 years.

Yet the orange-haired pirate of a child — with his mid-arm crutches and his leg braces and his wicked smile and his stutter and his limited ability to speak in full sentences and his infectious laugh and his willingness to play fearless kickball at the speed of a fast moving but rudderless speed boat — continues to live every day in my heart and in my imagination.

This is a story about that orange-haired pirate of a child.

But it is also a story about another ‘near-child’ — one who was nervous and unprepared — that was invited to guide him one summer long ago.

And ultimately it is a story about the adult (who that ‘near-child’ became) that eventually allowed that orange-haired pirate of a boy guided him.

***

Chapter 1: A Pirate and The Uninitiated

It was 1984.

It was the summer before high school. I was barely a teenager. I felt incredibly awkward, shy, and lost. I knew so very little.

I sat alone in the way-back seat of well worn school bus. Tried to ignore everyone in the rows ahead of me. Tried to ignore what lay miles ahead of me. Tried to ignore that I was scared. Felt way over my head. Wanted desperately to get off that bus. Wanted to go home.

Much like so many kids heading off to camp for the first time.

But I wasn’t a camper. And this wasn’t my first summer camp.

The trees passed by my bus window in a blur. Yet, the trip took forever.

I just wanted off.

The only way off that bus that morning was to step fully into an experience that would fundamentally change my life. An experience for which I was woefully unprepared.

If you had stepped off the bus with me at the age of 14 in that long ago summer morning, you would have walked into a modest (at the time) summer camp nestled on the end of a lake in Dedham, in ‘central’ Maine, about a half an hour north of Bangor as if you were on the way to Ellsworth, which is on the way to Bar Harbor. which is where most people head when they go to Maine in this summer.

But an hour or so before you’d make it to Bar Harbor there lies a place of deep joy and refuge, healing and living. There lies a place called Camp Capella.

At the time Capella was sponsored by United Cerebral Palsy, but it welcomed all kids regardless of the uniqueness of their specific disability or their life circumstance. It was (and is) a camp where young people — whose bodies are broken or unique or challenged — are allowed to be children in the most beautiful and life-affirming of ways.

Capella did (and does) a lot of wonderful things, but it honored (and honors) childhood and life particularly well. In other words, it honored (and honors) the magical power of summer camp.

But I didn’t understand that at the time.

I was 14.

I was young, sheltered, naive, nervous. I had never spent an authentic moment with anyone with a visible disability in my life until the moment I got off that bus in the summer of 1984.

All I knew is that I was going to be a 14yo camp counselor working with handicapped children.

And I wasn’t sure I could actually get off that bus.

As a 14yo I was technically in no position to be a true camp counselor. Not even sure how it was legal, other than there must have been a stipulation for ‘counselor in training’ that someone selected for me as a way to invite me to work that summer.

You see, Capella was a place — at that time — that creatively took advantage of all resources and people and hearts and rolls of duct tape and whatever one could offer. It was truly a by-any-means-necessary culture when it came to the children they loved, protected and served.

That included an awkward 14yo boy who was going to be a first-time camp counselor with kids he had no idea how to love, protect and serve.

***

Chapter 2: Getting Off The Bus

Fast forward past my getting off the bus that first day.

Fast forward past a few days of intense counselor orientation — finding out I had to help kids eat, help kids get dressed, help kids use the restrooms, help kids speak (even if on a backboard and only able to blink a few expressions), help kids manage unexpected seizures, help kids stay alive.

And fast forward past the nervousness (and emerging sense of excitement) of trying to sleep the night before the kids showed up.

I’m standing at the front entrance of the main building. Another bus arrives. The door opens.

And out steps a pirate.

Okay, Uriah wasn’t a pirate, but I want you to imagine a young pirate kind of kid, a young pirate kind of kid with a shock of fire-orange hair and a smile that stretched to the horizon.

He bounded and near-collapsed out of the bus, one hyper violent step and landing at a time.

He was my kid for the summer.

And I was already in absolute awe of him.

***

Chapter 3: Looking Out To The Water

Uriah had one daily goal. Heck, maybe it was his one life goal.

It didn’t matter what sort of day it was or what was on the activity list. We could be struggling to get lunch into his mouth as his body faced excitable convulsions. It could be when his knees were bloodied from yet another collapse-fall as he sprinted on crutches down the concrete walk way. It could be in the middle of arts-n-crafts with fabric and glue and who knows what else mockingly stuck to his hands. It could be in the rain when clouds and plastic jackets were impossible to avoid. And it was absolutely anytime rest hour was forced on him.

The water of Phillips Lake always stood off in the distance, about 40 yards from the bathhouse where we kept our gear and changed clothing.

That lake was a siren call for Uriah.

All kids love being in the water at camp. That’s no secret.

But for a kid like Uriah, it wasn’t just love. It was life.

Literally that lake was the difference between Uriah feeling broken vs. feeling alive, between Uriah being dependent vs. being fully realized, between Uriah being a deficit vs. being a super hero.

You see, when Uriah was in the lake, the world got out of his way. Gravity got out of his way. Injury got out of his way. Seizures got out of his way. Limitations of any kind got out of his way.

On land, Uriah was a kid who collapsed, constantly covered in blood and never-healing scabs. Uriah was a young boy whose braces and crutches poorly prevented him from falling in every movement. Uriah was somebody with regular seizures. Uriah was a young boy who had at most 20 or 30 words that he could force out in a way one could easily understand.

But in the lake, Uriah was a porpoise.

Sleek and effortless. Full of splash and wonder. Contortions of grace. Inexhaustible. Fluent. Seizure-less. Boundless. Boundary-less.

At 14 — as an unprepared first-time counselor working with kids like Uriah for the first time in my life — I didn’t fully appreciate the profound wisdom that I was witnessing in Uriah’s natural response to the siren’s call of that lake.

And for much of the decades of teaching, coaching, working at more camps, designing schools, and learning to be a parent that followed that long-ago summer, I didn’t fully grasp the wisdom that that orange-haired pirate of a child was teaching me.

But I do now.

You see, that summer I thought that my job and responsibility was to pick Uriah back up and proverbially dust him off when he fell. I thought my job was to guide him and teach him and clean him and protect him and keep the world of risk away from him. I thought that my job was to get him into his bathing suit and down to the lake, let him swim for 30 minutes or so, then get him back to the bathhouse to dry off and change again so he could get back to the next thing on the activity list. I thought my job and responsibility was to send him to kickball and then to arts and crafts and then to lunch so he wouldn’t be late to what was next.

But where I failed is that I didn’t see what Uriah was seeing.

I didn’t look out to the lake that was calling him. I didn’t see the light and mischief in his eyes when he saw it. I didn’t see — in spite of blood and scabs and braces and collapse — that Uriah was in head over heels in love. And I didn’t see that all he wanted as a 9 and then 10 and then 11yo boy pirate in the three summers I was with him was to feel absolutely alive.

If I could go back to those long-ago summers knowing what I know now — thanks to holding Uriah’s story inside my heart and imagination for decades since he passed — I would have broken all the rules, been late to all the activities, rolled my eyes at the ‘end’ of swim time, and found by-any-means-necessary ways to let him be a porpoise in that lake without limit of time or space or gravity or words or pain.

Yes, arts and crafts mattered. Eating a proper healthy lunch mattered. Kickball mattered. Being ‘on time’ mattered. And learning to communicate clearly, even with a stutter and limited vocabulary, mattered.

But what mattered most was the wisdom of an orange haired pirate falling in love with the lake and the ease at which his body and imagination flowed thru the water, occasionally breaking the surface back into the sunlight in riotous laughter before diving back down into the welcoming mystery below.

What I’ve learned over time is that summer camps like Camp Capella do not exist for perfection. They do not exist for showing up on time. Or making sure falls never happen.

Camps like Capella are places where young bodies with a myriad of challenges are allowed to be children in the purest of ways and the boundlessness of limitless love.

By any means necessary.

And children like Uriah — with their wellspring of energy and wisdom and mischievous looks to the lake and the horizon — are our guides.

If we choose to see what they see, feel what they feel, love what they love, dive into what they dive into.

I am a better educator because of Uriah. I am a better parent because of Uriah.

Best of all: I am simply a better human being because of Uriah.

***

Chapter 4: Lesson Learned and Shared Many Years Later

A few years back, I was invited to be the opening keynote speaker at a large (and rapidly growing) school district in Ohio at the beginning of a new school year. It was a celebration and welcoming back of all faculty, staff, administration, and board members. The indoor complex was packed wall to wall. The energy was palpable. And this group of school professionals were ready to get at it, although still holding onto the last vestiges of their summer vacation, attired in shorts and flip flops and well earned tans.

The district was a model of excellence, resources and innovation. Their students have a well-deserved reputation for thriving in all forms of academics, athletics, and extra-curriculars. Their teachers are talented and proud of the impact they have on their students. The parents and local business leaders are rightfully proud of the accomplishments of the young people (and staff), touting it as central to the tremendous success of local business, real estate, and community culture.

When asked to speak about the ‘future of learning’ — central to the work I do daily — I was struck by the fact that the real opportunity for such a district wasn’t in further accelerating into educational trends and technologies. It wasn’t in increasing test scores. It wasn’t about more state championships. It wasn’t about better marching band routines. They had all of that in spades.

The real opportunity was to remind them of the beautiful complexities found within each of their kids. And in each one of them.

With no PowerPoint slides, no provocative education or economic stats, no compelling stories about the future of learning or societal trend lines, I instead told them the story of two boys: Uriah at 9 and me at 14.

I told them the story because it was a story of summer time.

I told them the story because it was a story of childhood laughter and overcoming camp challenges.

I told them the story because it was a story of new relationships and sunset conversations.

I told them the story because it was a story about all of us coming back together from our own summer adventures and conversations and challenges and laughter and relationships and sunsets, becoming a community of co-learners once again, something central to this moment for everyone gathered at this back-to-school kick-off event.

But I also told them about Uriah and me and that long ago summer of 1984 because it gave me a chance to admit publicly that I had gotten it wrong.

That I had failed.

That despite being a very experienced educator, coach, and school designer — and a parent of two — I had spent most of my career and early days of parenthood getting it wrong.

That while I was so often passionately focused on ensuring the growth and skill development and accolades and accomplishments of my students (and my own children) — and teaching them the ‘lessons they would one day need’ when the world got tough— I had failed to do what mattered most.

I had failed — in that long-ago summer of 1984 — to notice what Uriah noticed.

I had failed to focus on following his path of curiosity.

I had failed to be curious about what he imagined.

I had failed to honor what he craved.

I had failed to create space for what he daydreamed.

I had failed to ensure he found the lake so he could find himself.

So, standing on that massive stage looking out at more than a thousand educators and school professionals, I told them that my greatest failure as an educator (and as a parent) was not in failing to prepare my students (and kids) for challenges or their future,…

…but that I had failed to fall in love with their most precious present.

And that I had failed to see what they saw.

And that I had failed to love what they loved.

And that I had failed to let my Uriah guide me in becoming a better parent, educator, leader, learner, and human being for far too many years.

As I ended my talk, I paused to ask the audience of successful educators, staff and leaders to make space for the ‘lakes’ that their kids looked out at, so that their young people could become porpoises on their own terms no matter what real world challenges and scars lay all around them.

I asked them to make sure they found their own Uriah.

I asked them to see the world the way their own Uriah looked at it.

I asked them to follow their own Uriah’s invitation.

And I asked them to let their own Uriah help them become better parents, educators, guides, learners, and human beings in the process.

Written by Christian Long

Christian Long is a designer, educator, and the founding partner of The WONDER Project, a design studio that helps organizations, schools and learning communities design and develop at the intersection of their mission and moonshots. Christian works nationally and internationally with students, teachers and school leaders, architects, and a wide array of multi-disciplinary professionals to design agile schools and organizations readying for the future. He regularly presents keynote addresses at conferences around the world focusing on the relationship between human-centered design and the future of education. Overall he is an unapologetic advocate for wonder and curiosity as the root of all learning worth doing. A much older version of Christian – many years into the future – can be found in semi-retirement at a tree-covered summer camp where he’ll continue to marvel first-hand at the shared joy of children and adults alike.

To find other articles written by Christian visit Medium

To learn more about Christian visit his Linkedin & Instagram accounts.  

To learn about Camp Capella: “The mission of Camp CaPella is to enhance life experiences for individuals with disabilities by providing accessible recreational and educational opportunities.”

Here are free online courses from Yale University, Stanford University, University of California, Berkeley, & Wageningen University to help you stay healthy both mentally and physically.

The Science of Well-Being: In this course you will engage in a series of challenges designed to increase your own happiness and build more productive habits. As preparation for these tasks, Professor Laurie Santos reveals misconceptions about happiness, annoying features of the mind that lead us to think the way we do, and the research that can help us change. You will ultimately be prepared to successfully incorporate a specific wellness activity into your life. via Yale University, offered on Coursera 

Child Nutrition and Cooking: Eating patterns that begin in childhood affect health and well-being across the lifespan.  The culture of eating has changed significantly in recent decades, especially in parts of the world where processed foods dominate our dietary intake. This course examines contemporary child nutrition and the impact of the individual decisions made by each family. The health risks associated with obesity in childhood are also discussed. Participants will learn what constitutes a healthy diet for children and adults and how to prepare simple, delicious foods aimed at inspiring a lifelong celebration of easy home-cooked meals. This course will help prepare participants to be the leading health providers, teachers and parents of the present and future. The text and other material in this course may include the opinion of the specific instructor and are not statements of advice, endorsement, opinion, or information of Stanford University. via Stanford University offered on Coursera

The Science of Happiness: The first MOOC to teach positive psychology. Learn science-based principles and practices for a happy, meaningful life. “The Science of Happiness” is the first MOOC to teach the ground-breaking science of positive psychology, which explores the roots of a happy and meaningful life. Students will engage with some of the most provocative and practical lessons from this science, discovering how cutting-edge research can be applied to their own lives. Created by UC Berkeley’s Greater Good Science Center, the course will zero in on a fundamental finding from positive psychology: that happiness is inextricably linked to having strong social connections and contributing to something bigger than yourself–the greater good. Students will learn about the cross-disciplinary research supporting this view, spanning the fields of psychology, neuroscience, evolutionary biology, and beyond. via University of California, Berkeley, offered on edx

Nutrition, Exercise and Sports: Learn about Nutrition, Exercise and Sports and understand how nutrition can support exercise and sports performance. Nutrition is crucial to live an active and healthy life, to support training, and to optimize performance. In this course, researchers and teachers from Wageningen University & Research will familiarize you with the nutritional aspects of exercise and sports. What are the basic concepts in exercise physiology and sport nutrition science? How is exercise being fueled for the different types of sports like; power sports, sprinting and endurance exercise? And how does protein support skeletal muscle mass and performance? In this course you will learn to estimate energy needs and understand thermoregulation and fluid balance. You will learn about the role of micronutrients and supplements in exercise performance. Moreover, you will be introduced to some health issues related to doing exercise.

This course also touches upon how the lessons learned from nutrition and sports research can be applied during ageing. For example, what are the benefits of extra protein in vulnerable age groups?

Be aware that this course will not tell you exactly what to eat. Instead, you will learn and understand the nutritional aspects of exercise and sport, so you can make your own informed decisions and critically evaluate nutritional advices and claims. via Wageningen University, offered on edx

Picture by Frank Romero

The fact that you are on this site means you are searching for help.  Hopefully, I can provide you with some answers.

How important is it that you have your child’s vision checked? It might interest you to know that 70% of the brain utilizes vision; that is why any neurological or developmental delay can impact how your child processes visual information.

While many parents assume the pediatrician does an eye exam as part of your yearly wellness exam, all that is performed is a vision screening.  And, when it comes to children with additional needs – it can be challenging to determine how well your child can see, unless the doctor has special training in this area.

How can a child pass a vision screening or eye exam, yet still have a vision problem?

Have you been told your child sees fine, yet he or she struggles to copy words from the board to paper on the desk in school? Or perhaps, your child just struggles with reading, or remembering what was read? Does your child have to touch everything in order to “see” it or feel balanced?

The key here is that just because a child can see the letters on the eye chart, which is typically 20 feet away, it doesn’t mean your child has all the visual skills required for reading, learning, or functioning in life.   

In her book, Autism Solutions: How to Create a Healthy and Meaningful Life for Your Child, Ricki G. Robinson, MD, MPH, Clinical Professor of Pediatrics at Keck School of Medicine, states:

 “Precise coordinated eye movements are needed for focusing, eye tracking, and binocular vision (eyes working together).  All are required for maintaining eye contact and spatial awareness, even hand-eye coordination. … However, if these skills are delayed, they can be learned.”

 

To whom does this apply?

This applies to all children, especially those with additional needs.  For example, I saw a child with Down Syndrome who could see the letters on the line on the eye chart that is referred to as 20/20.  The parents were even told his vision was fine.  However, as a result of a developmental vision evaluation, we were able to determine that he had trouble shifting his focus from seeing far away to being able to see at the distance necessary for reading.  He could barely see up close.  A special pair of bifocals fixed the problem.  Optometric research has found that 65-70% of kids with Down Syndrome have this visual disorder (accommodative insufficiency).

Children with additional needs, including those on the autism spectrum, CP, Down Syndrome, ADHD, Fragile X, twice-exceptional children as well as gifted learners, all share one thing in common.  They have eyes.  In most cases, unless you have seen a developmental optometrist, you have either been told their vision is fine because they can see the letters on the eye chart, or that they are seeing the best they ever will, or there is nothing else that can be done. 

In some cases, your child may have an eye turn that was “corrected” with surgery, or you are considering surgery.  Depending on the cause of your child’s additional needs, the potential of an eye turn is significantly greater than in the neurotypical population.  In fact, it can range from 17-50% compared to 2-5%. 

While most ophthalmologists will be up front about the potential of multiple surgeries being needed to achieve straight eyes, little is shared about what a child’s world looks like when they have an eye turn (no matter how small). Once the eyes appear straight, it is assumed their vision is fine, even though it may not be. 

Many children struggle with double vision, or vision that fluctuates where print or objects appear to move on the page even with the slightest eye turn which, as parents, you may or may not be able to see.  Because they lack the verbal skills to tell you how they see, and also because they have no idea what their world should look like, they don’t say anything.  Instead they show you with their behavior, if you know how to interpret the signs.

Some of the signs include difficulty paying attention, poor reading comprehension, difficulty reading or learning to read, problems with balance or movement and clumsiness.  For a longer list, click here.

Who should evaluate your child’s vision?

As a developmental optometrist, I can tell you, developmental optometrists have a wealth of training in how to evaluate overall visual function – that means how we use our eyes in daily life.  We also have specific training in how to correct visual deficiencies without surgery.  Most developmental optometrists understand how to help children with additional needs.

Sometimes we are lucky, and all the child needs is special glasses.  In more severe cases, it can require a combination of special glasses plus an in-office program of optometric vision therapy.  The good news is that developmental optometrists have been able to help reduce the challenges that additional needs children face on a daily basis.  In some cases, special glasses can eliminate toe walking, and in other cases, the glasses help children to be able to see to read where previously reading was impossible.

In her book, Raising a Sensory Smart Child, Occupational Therapist, Lindsey Biel, states,

“Consider going to a developmental optometrist even if no one refers you, because an undiagnosed vision problem is a major obstacle for any child.”  

Correcting vision problems in children with additional needs can be life changing.  To find a doctor who can provide your special need’s child with this type of vision care visit: www.covd.org.

 

Written by Dr. Matthew Walsh

 

Dr. Matthew Walsh is a developmental optometrist with an office in Naples, FL.  Dr. Walsh provides specialized services in the diagnosis and treatment of vision problems that interfere with reading, learning and overall functioning in life.  For more information visit his website: www.naplesvisiontherapy.com