I'm also laughing at the advanced presentation of passive-aggressiveness.
(FWIW, my EG/PG DD11 was dubbed "Little Ghandi" by a daycare provider when she was nine months old... she didn't "fight back" when other children were inappropriate... she simply manipulated them using their own baser impulses and left them in gaping in her wake. )
Your DS sounds to me as though his trajectory is virtually identical to my DD's-- er, or what hers WOULD have been if we'd enrolled her in a local school.
We didn't, in part because a horrified veteran teacher pulled me aside at kindergarten orientation and told me in no uncertain terms just how destructive it would be for DD.
The resistance to performing like a trained circus poodle also sounds
painfully familiar. It sounds exactly like what we went through (repeatedly) when DD was...
well, we've been though it a lot. It makes any "curriculum" a potentially bad fit within weeks, days, or even hours. Once a kid at this LOG knows something, they
know it, and drill and kill is like fingernails down a chalkboard to them at that point. Forcing the issue beyond that produces defiant resistance that is positively beyond description in its intensity. Pushing for compliance at that point produces
globalization of the behavior, and they soon begin refusing to do anything at all.
It sounds like that is precisely what you're all seeing unfold with your son.
<SIGH> I wish I had a magic solution-- but I don't. It hasn't necessarily stopped now that she's older, and in fact, she's much more adept at avoidance and manipulation now. "Normal" curriculum with its spiraling pedagogy is just plain toxic for kids like this.
DH and I were talking about this yesterday with our DD-- this is the time of year that she
always begins melting down in spectacular fashion, though often there are twinges of refusal to do work as early as late October... the thing is, radical acceleration does the trick
for a while, but only until she realizes that it is STILL mostly 'review' of concepts she already knows, with a few little nuggets of new stuff embedded in the old...
In my epiphany with my DH yesterday, I made a connection to the old saw about the kids placed in rooms filled with manure-- it goes something like this:
The researcher observed that the first three subjects were crying to be left in such awful circumstances, but that the fourth child was happily using a spade and digging in the manure. When the puzzled researchers asked her why she was so pleased, she paused and elatedly announced that "With all of this manure, there's GOT to be a pony in here somewhere!!"I observed that for my DD, this is like being led from one horse-manure-filled room to another each year (or grade skip, or class change) and initially being excited to dig and dig in order to find the pony... but now, she's deciding that
there IS NO ****ED PONY, and she's tired of being told that there is. The adults telling her this have lost ALL credibility by leading her up the garden path one time too many. KWIM?
I agree with Tallulah. Run, don't walk-- get him OUT OUT OUT of there before these problems get worse. Because they most certainly will. Whether or not the other school is a
long-term solution is debatable, but for now, it sounds like a good fit.
Been there, done that, got the teeshirt. It's made of hair, by the way. Very itchy.
