Tutor enlightened by the tutored
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Sue Clark
I got a call last week from the mother of a student at Corona del Mar
High School.
She had saved my ad from last summer’s Daily Pilot, in which I
offered “tutoring for the procrastinating teen.” I was impressed
she’d saved it, yet took the opportunity to tease her about
procrastinating. Luckily, she laughed. She sounded as though she had
respect for her children, all of whom had different temperaments and
abilities. I love that in a parent and assumed the tutoring would go
well if she had that attitude.
Truth be told, I’d forgotten all about that tutoring endeavor.
This summer, I had done some substitute work the last week of June at
University High in Irvine, teaching the first week of an SAT prep
class. The teacher had unexpectedly needed a few days off, and I had
been a last-minute pinch hitter. We had a blast that week. The kids
had paid a hefty fee and were motivated, if not thrilled. I was able
to add some fun, and we worked through the writing section of the SAT
book. I missed them.
I hadn’t run the ad in the Pilot this summer, because in between
moving to my beloved condo in Costa Mesa and trying to make the patio
a Rogers Garden showplace on Home Depot funding, I hadn’t thought of
it. My recent Minnesota trip had further complicated things.
After ascertaining that the student, as well as the mom, was OK
with tutoring, I agreed to meet with them on Monday. I’m looking
forward to it. I miss being around teens in the summer, and my job
with this student will be to help with writing skills, something I
enjoy doing.
I’ve tutored several local kids, but one that I will never forget
was a pregnant 15-year-old, Alicia (not her real name). My district
recruited me to work with her after she was diagnosed with pregnancy
complications and placed on homeschooling status.
Alicia was obviously in for a hard life. (Most teen girls I’ve
worked with have opted to keep their baby). Her goal was to continue
her education while being a young mother. She had had a lackluster
academic career up to that point, but the one-on-one teaching proved
ideal for her. This young girl was a natural student. The Socratic
Method is a far cry from a class of 35, and Alicia immediately began
to blossom. She loved knowledge and absorbed it like a sponge.
We would read the newspaper together each time we finished her
lessons. I had to force her at first to read aloud and added insult
to injury by making her underline any word she didn’t know. That
summer, there were many articles on the war in Iraq. One of them that
she opted to read aloud was about people protesting the U.S.
involvement in Iraq. As she read, she looked puzzled.
“You mean people are against it?” she said, as she underlined
escalating, and wrote it in her notebook.
“Some are, and some support it,” I said.
“Why would anyone not want us to be there?”
“You’d better read more on both sides,” was the studied answer I
gave her.
The next time we met, she said, “I talked to my dad about the
protesters.” (Uh oh, I thought; he’ll think I was putting ideas in
her head).
“He and I had this, like, great discussion about it.”
This was the kind of student teachers would kill for, but in a
crowded classroom, no one had noticed her intellectual curiosity.
As her pregnancy progressed, and her belly enlarged, I had her
read Ibsen’s “A Doll House.” This was a simplified version of the
story of Nora, a housewife who lived in a society where women were
treated like little children by their husbands. In it, Nora rebels
and commits the unthinkable act of trying to make her own life within
a restrictive marriage.
As we read the actors’ lines together, Alicia’s face, round from
pregnancy, grew shocked. “How could he call her his little doll?” she
asked. “That’s so totally a put-down. It’s like she’s his property!”
“Do you think he saw it as a put-down?” I asked.
“Well, maybe not. But it’s horrible. I would never let a guy treat
me like that.”
I believed her. Alicia would smack a boy down before she let him
treat her badly. I thought about her own looming challenge of teen
motherhood and resolved to help her when she was ready to get
financial aid for college. The burden of having a child paled beside
her intellectual curiosity.
I still get notes from Alicia, who is raising her toddler with the
help of a large family and the experience of caring for a younger
sister from birth. She’s calmer about it than I was as a young mother
with little support and a crying baby.
I don’t think my new student will have these problems. First of
all, he has not fathered any kids, and from all reports, he has
self-esteem. Second, his mom can afford tutoring, so he won’t have a
life of financial struggle while attending college. His future looks
optimistic.
I know I can give him some organizational tools for writing. I
hope I transmit some of the fun I have with writing. And I can tell
from my own burst of energy, it’s almost time for me to get back to
school.
* SUE CLARK is a Costa Mesa resident and a high school guidance
counselor at Creekside High School in Irvine.
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