Robot Factories
by
Fred Reed
How
is it possible to spend twelve years in school and not be able to
read? How? It is beyond me. A sheet of dry wall would be reading
in less time.
Start
at the beginning. The alphabet consists of all of twenty-six letters,
as mysterious as potatoes. Whoopee-do. How long can it take to learn
two dozen little squiggles?
A
story: When my elder daughter was barely two, my wife and I came
back from a junket to Russia. We were on the sofa looking at a coffee-table
book from Moscow when Macon waddled in and began hollering, Bee!
Bee! Thinking that a wasp or some related monster had invaded
our sacred domestic precincts, I went into protective-male mode
and prepared to make war on the beast. No wasp. No bee. Perhaps
the child was delusional, a paranoid schizophrenic.
Well,
no. She was looking at a balalaika on the front of the book which
looked like a lower-case B. "Hmmm," I thought with my
accustomed preternatural perceptiveness. The kid appears to be on
to something. She was.
I
got a set of those magnetic stick-em refrigerator plastic letters
and began showing them to her for five minutes a day, about all
the attention span she then had. Before reaching twenty-six months,
she knew all of them, upper and lower case. It is true that her
pronunciational mastery lagged her alphabetic grasp. You may not
know of the letter Bubble Dew. It exists.
At
three, she was reading. Yes, it was, Billy chased the cat
up the tree, not the eschatological significance of
the kerygma. Still, it was reading. It was what millions of
kids who have finished school cannot do, even at the cat-and-tree
level. She thought it was splendid fun. It did not occur to her
that any effort was involved. Of course Daddy was making an enormous
fuss over her, which was not a discouragement. Daddy is that way
about his girls.
How
did I bring about this onset of literacy? The same way I later did
with her sister, who also was reading well before kindergarten.
I told her that c said kuh, that a said a
and t said tuh. Kuh-a-tuh. Cat. And look here, Pumpkin,
r says err, and if you put it in front of "at"
you get err-a-tuh, rat. Aint that something?
She
agreed that it was. Indeed she received all of this occult lore
with attention and no visible puzzlement. It quickly dawned on her
that you could string these letter things together to express interesting
thoughts. Soon she could sound out words she didnt remotely
understand and, when the multitudinous exceptions and peculiarities
of English intruded, she simply learned them.
I
dont know. About a month.
I
didnt regard this as a miracle, because it wasnt one.
Kids have been learning to read practically forever. They are absorptive
creatures, awash in curiosity. A couple of dozen letters, associated
sounds, retentive memories, and voila! There is nothing to it. It
is easy.
And
yet somehow, inconceivably, many children never learn to read. Now
thats a miracle, like levitating a 54 Merc while sober.
How can you keep children from learning for twelve years what a
couple of small girls learned in a month?
Another
question is how kids can be kept from wanting to read. Here too
we have enacted a marvel that ranks with the fishes and loaves.
When I was about seven, I was a literary omnivore, coming back from
the library in Westover with armloads of indiscriminately chosen
everything. The Orange Book of fairy tales, the Red Book, etc.,
Greek mythology, Kipling, WWII, battleships, what have you. I would
happily attribute this to my unparalleled brilliance if I could
find evidence. Unfortunately other kids were doing the same thing.
The
drug store sold Hardy Boys books, Tom Swift, the Lone Ranger, long
rows of them. Presumably they werent there exclusively for
me. I remember inventing what I called sneak reading.
When supposedly I was going to sleep, I held the plug of my reading
lamp just far enough into the socket to turn it on, so that I could
quietly turn it off by pulling it out slightly should I hear creaking
floorboards. I was fooling my parents less than I thought I was,
but this revelation came later. At various times I used flashlights
and candles. (Book matches don't work. I know.)
I
have since learned that all sorts of kids did the same thing. So
much for my uniqueness in the universe.
How
do you render witless kids who by their nature want to know everything?
In the early Fifties, when I was a wee tyke, toy stores sold chemistry
sets. (Gilbert. One had fifty bottles.) You did actual sort of chemistry
with them. They had the alcohol lamp, test tubes, NiChrome wire
for jack-leg spectroscopy, as well as cobalt chloride, phenolpthalein,
sodium silicate, sodium thiosulfate, and such like. There was a
sphinthariscope so you could watch radium decaying and perhaps eat
it and get bone cancer, and a booklet that explained atomic structure
and the difference between atomic number and atomic weight.
In
toy stores. For ordinary little boys. The same stores had Gilbert
microscopes, though mine was a fifteen-dollar better model from
Edmund Scientific. I knew about well slides, cover glasses, Canada
balsam, Volvox, rotifers, every bug in the garden, paramecia, planaria.
Michel Duquez and I slit our wrists ever so slightly so that we
could look at blood. We were not gooberish socially defective nerds
obsessed with science. We had baseball mitts and comic-book collections
and explored storm sewers.
School?
Much better then than now. At Robert E. Lee Elementary on Lee Highway
we learned more fractions and English grammar than many college
graduates today know. Smart women had not yet all become useless
lawyers. Yet even then schools were tedious jails, robot factories.
They refused to let kids learn what they were ready to learn.
In
second grade my teacher decided that I was retarded. We were reading
about a family of beavers, and Mrs. Beaver had three sticks and
Little Bitty Beaver had four, and how many did they have together?
I didnt really care. I wanted to read my astronomy book. I
guess it showed.
So
a psychologist lady came from the school board and every day for
a week she tested me to put me in an asylum. Could I hear and see,
she wanted to know? Yes, lady, actually, and now can I read my astronomy
book? She had some dimwitted tests of logic and then of vocabulary,
which I had lots of because I hadnt been paying attention
in school. In those days school wasnt quite a place intended
to keep kids from learning, but it was getting there.
Finally
the psychologist lady told my teacher that I was bored. She could
have asked me.
January
17, 2005
Fred
Reed is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well.
Copyright
© 2005 Fred Reed
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