Picked Last for Gym
May. 19th, 2005 12:35 pmThe only important thing to me about my score on the SAT was that I wanted to beat my dad's score. Most of the schools in the Midwest accept ACT scores, and I think at least one of the ones I applied to required them. I didn't have a "competition" with anyone at my school -- we just weren't really like that -- and with the SAT I could compete with my dad. They hadn't done the major recentering of the test yet, but I still wonder about the drift from the time he took it until the time I did. I'm very good at standardized tests. I'm also very good at recognizing how very little they mean, so I can definitely sympathize with
(I was not picked dead last, usually. I was never picked first, but I was also not generally enough of a disaster to be the last person picked. Ralston High had much bigger disasters than me. I've never liked team sports, unless you count floor hockey, which rocks because you get to hit people with sticks. I am much better at things I can be bothered to pay attention to, especially with the elbowing-and-checking component, but no one paid enough attention to notice that I was much better at it than I was at other sports, so I didn't get picked any sooner.)
I'm extremely ambivalent about things that are "very good for your age." Age-appropriateness was often used as a bludgeoning weapon when I was a kid: what you are doing right now is very good for your age, so don't you dare try to do more or better. What you're doing now is very good for your age, so I don't have to treat you with any respect, just a patronizing tolerance. One of my friends was once explaining that one of the problems with only children* is that we end up with no sense of age-appropriateness, that we want to be able to do everything just plain well rather than well for one of the kids. I hope she has given up on getting me to see this as a bad thing. When I was saying this to someone close to me recently, he told me, "
On the other hand, Roo's current inability to play toccatas and fugues does not indicate that the kid is not very musical. Sometimes age-appropriateness really is, well, appropriate. Doing well in sports in high school is a good thing for people that age who value athletics. Doing well on the SAT is a good thing for people that age who value vocabulary and other similar test elements. I would never scorn Robin's crookedly drawn letters ("Is -- izzat an I?") because they weren't
*I have never once tried to explain to her the problems with people with siblings, but she has explained to me the problems with only children on more than one occasion. It's charming.
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Date: 2005-05-19 07:46 pm (UTC)I am a smart person. I pick things up quickly, I understand complex systems, and I remember things very well. As in your original post, these are facts, not value statements, but they are rarely taken as such by others. I have long been tired of people who are intimidated when I know more than they do about something. It hardly means I know more than them about *everything*. I tend to fall into nearly teacher/student relationships with people, since they seem to believe I think on a higher plane than they do, so I can't really relate to them, but I'm useful for fixing their computer issues or answering their product questions (this often comes up at work, much more so than with actual friends).
I won't even start on the "age level" question, other than to say labeling someone as "above grade level" in one skill seems to often have the efect of stamping that person as "in front" in all areas, which is manifestly untrue. Grr.
no subject
Date: 2005-05-19 08:02 pm (UTC)