For the third time in less than three years, Alex spent his first day in a new school yesterday.
Take One
The first time, he was a five year old in a necktie, starting Primary 1 at Gilmerton Primary School in Edinburgh.
He loved his time at Gilmerton, though we didn’t fit into the primarily working-class community. We also had occasional differences with the school administration, but we kept them away from Alex. He learned to read that year, and discovered a real love of maths. But he knew that he wasn’t going to stay; we were up front with him that we were moving to the Netherlands after that first year.
Take Two
The second time was last autumn, when he started school here in Holland*. We weren’t sure how we were going to handle this, since he came here speaking virtually no Dutch at all. After discussions with the schools in our area, we found ourselves with two choices:
- Drop Alex back a year to playschool-type schooling in the local village school, so that he could spend the time working on his language skills. All being well, he could then skip a grade and be back with his contemporaries. The American family† in the village did this with their eldest a year before we arrived, and found it a successful strategy. Unfortunately, we knew that Alex would be bored senseless by a return to playschool after a year of sit-down learning.
- Put Alex into a school a little further away that specializes in teaching foreign children Dutch in a year, while continuing their ordinary education. (Kind of the reverse of an international school, basically.) Demographically, the school is very different than our village, drawing much of its student body from people who live in the city.
We chose Option 2, and Alex had a fairly intimidating first day at the Kernschool last autumn. He’s a trouper, though, and plunged in wholeheartedly. He worried a lot at first, unsure if he was learning well enough or fast enough, but found his feet academically after the first term. But he never settled socially, making few friends and struggling with the fairly rough and tumble school culture. He has, however, learned a lot of Dutch, and is about half a year ahead of his age group in maths.
Take Three
The Kernschool’s program is designed to slipstream the children into their local schools, once they have the language skills to cope. This meshes well with the local school’s program of settling new children in with their class groups before the summer vacation. So yesterday, Alex went to the village school for the first time, for a half day of sitting with next year’s classmates. (Wednesdays are short days in Dutch schools).
He was nervous before he went in, worrying about his hair and his appearance. I helped him peer into Fiona’s classroom as we went to his (she had no special Dutch training, but started school normally in January; youth is an indisputable advantage to language learning). When he went into the room and his teacher began to speak Dutch to him, I felt a lurch: I didn’t follow everything she said to him. But he did, having already surpassed me in learning the language.
Apparently, he came out triumphant and ecstatic, declaring the new school “super cool”. He liked his classmates, enjoyed the academic work, and had no trouble talking his teacher’s ear off in Dutch. He can’t wait to start.
And then he woke up at 11:30 at night, desperately missing Scotland. I lay in bed with him for half an hour, talking about homesickness‡ and the delights of the Netherlands.
* Pedantic note: Although Holland is not actually a synonym for the Netherlands, we live in the province of Noord-Holland.
† By this classification, we are the English family in the village. It is really not worth trying to correct this.
‡ A matter close to my mind at the moment, since two of my colleagues went to San Francisco last week. One of them even went across the Bay to meet my parents and see my dad’s printing press. My thoughts were often with them, and the world I had left behind to come to Europe.
If it helps the little man’s homesickness, you could tell him I think he’s super-cool for being able to talk his teaacher’s ear off. I would love to live in a foreign country…
…though, I do recall a long, sad summer spent in northern California.
He needs plenty hugs and good friends.
Does Alex know how lucky he is to have the family that he has?
Give the little guy my best wishes.
Super cool family, never mind the school.
We’ve been toying with the idea of San Francisco since we loved with the place when we were there, but I know homesickness would hit me hard too…and I’m thirty-shenanigans!
One bright summer day in September 1968, my baby brother and one of his youngest cousins, who had never met before, spent a whole afternoon jabbering away at each other in La Coruña, even though neither could speak the other’s language. It was a sight that awed everybody else (including all the truly bilingual members of the family — basically just my mother and myself, my father could sort of manage). Small children soak up languages. Homesickness, now, is another matter. That takes more time, and a need to lay good experiences over memories.
“primarily working class”…..curious, I thought we all were.
Ian,
The university educations, geeky intellectual hobbies and office jobs really set us apart from the taxi driver across the road and the lass who worked in the Safeway.
A better term from my childhood would be “blue collar”, perhaps.
Re: By this classification, we are the English family in the village. It is really not worth trying to correct this.
I’d suggest you’re either the Scottish family, the British Family or the other anglophone family: although whether or not Americans are anglophones is a moot point.
Tom,
The Dutch don’t really “do” the English/Scottish distinction. British = English, unless we do much detailed explanation.
But then, considering that only two Dutch provinces have “Holland” in their names, I can hardly roll my eyes at the local ignorance of the UK!