Learning & Leading With Habits of Mind

(avery) #1

Pam’s comments were followed by some silence, so Julie asked if
there were any other thoughts about the process. I felt obliged to defend,
or at least explain, why I tolerate and even encourage the kind of “wasted
time” Pam described. I had talked before about this kind of conference as
a practice, something that might be done regularly as a part of keeping
one’s clinical eye focused and keen.
“You are practicing your ability to wonder about children’s work,” I
said. “It is an exercise in living with the idea that there isn’t one right
answer and [in] entertaining the [multiple] possibilities. I think there is
some value in that even if, in the end, you tell us what the child meant
and we accept that.”
Annette responded by commenting on how the child’s reason for writ-
ing might affect the way the teacher chooses to respond to the ambiguity
or lack of clarity in the writing. The rest of the conversation picked up
and pursued these themes:


Cherylann:But in terms of the process, if Pam had clarified
the question and we’d never had the conversation about what to
say to that child about the ambiguity.... And what I take away
from this conversation is that the next time a child comes to me
with a poem, I may say, “Hey, this is really ambiguous. Did you
mean that? Do you mean it to be this way?” Talking about the
process, if you had clarified it beforehand, we never would have
discussed the issue of ambiguity.
Margaret:I agree. And I think one of the most wonderful
things you can say to a child about their work is, “I thought about
this. And in my thinking I can see all different kinds of mean-
ings.” And that ambiguity is part of the richness. That it can mean
one thing to the person who wrote it and something equally rich
and equally meaningful to someone else. Isn’t that wonderful?
That kind of richness of experience.
Steve:Why do you think that’s wonderful?
Margaret:I think that’s wonderful because it is telling the
person that wrote it that there are more things in heaven and
earth than they can see. Something that they have written has

246 Learning and Leading with Habits of Mind

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