By
Judy - His Kindergarten Teacher
I probably
have a hundred stories about Nicholas, since I was his teacher
for a brief period in his life, but one sticks out above all others.
Knowing
that he had been "kicked out" of so many classrooms
already at an early age and the fact that his behavior was so
volatile, I would understand if his knowledge base was limited.
My classroom had children in Kindergarten and First grade, but
cognitively the functioning level was so diverse. I had asked
the group who could count to 100 and one little Kindergartener
(shoes off, thumb in mouth) stated "by ones or tens".
This same child answered me "English or Spanish". Also
it was an election year. We had spent the traditional time spent
on what I refer to as the "old dead white men" (Washington,
Lincoln, etc..). When I asked who the President of the United
States was, Nicholas once again had the right answer.Typically
young children will spout out Washington's name; but not Nicholas.
A couple of adults were also sitting ar ound the table and asked
"Do you know who the Vice President is". Once again,
Nicholas knew that Dick Cheney was the answer. Though
he might not be able to sit still long and may not have appeared
to be listening to today's lesson, he was able to answer the questions
asked of him.
Asperger
children do not fit the classic mold. They do not sit in desks
quietly, read as directed and write down their answers in a timely
manner. Since their learining is "non-traditional" the
teaching they receive must be "non-traditional". Definitely
will keep you on your toes. They can remember everything you say,
but understand it in the most concrete ways. If you say I will
love you to death, they will look for the body.
Nicholas
grew that year, and so did his teacher. Godspeed my friend.