Most of my teaching career has been spent working with children who did not ‘make the grade’ for one reason or another. Many of these were what I call ‘grey area’ students.
‘Grey area’ students who are those children who not doing too well in class but who do not seem to have a specific learning difficulty.
Grey area students:
* struggle to finish their homework
* never seem to do well no matter how hard they try
* get frustrated and begin to lose their self confidence
* think they are stupid and will never be able to learn
* have done well in the past but now are meeting learning hurdles
They are the students that parents and teachers worry about. They know there is a problem but but have no idea what the problem is or what they can do to help.
Every class contains ‘grey area’ children. This would net be a problem if these children were getting the help they need to overcome their learning hurdles and do well in school, but they are not.
Classrooms are made up of children with all kinds of abilities. Teachers know which are the bright kids and which are the ones in need of extra support. Most teachers know how to get these children the extra help they need from the school system. Bright kids are sent on enrichment programs and children with obvious learning problems are referred for assessment and then either placed in a special class or provided with extra support in the classroom. (Well , that is how it has worked in all the school systems I have worked with).
And this is as it should be.
But, what about the kids that are left, the ‘average’ kids who are doing reasonably well in class, who have their moments of glory when they are good at something, but who may also have their moments of struggle and despair when they are not reaching their learning potential. What about the kids who are struggling to learn but who do not qualify for extra help, who are trying to learn but have met a barrier that they cannot overcome on their own, and who do not get the support they need to get them over their learning hurdles?
It is these ‘grey area’ students that I have come to be very concerned about. They inhabit the ‘grey area’ that exists in every classroom. The space where the teacher is concerned about the child’s learning but not concerned enough to start the process of getting him or her assessed for a possible learning problem.
As a result, these children are left to struggle, to gradually lose their self confidence as learners, and to never reach the learning heights of which they are capable.
Is your child a ‘grey area’ student? If so you need to do something to help.






Great article, Patricia-you hit the proverbial nail on the head. It’s those struggling students who don’t quite qualify for special help that worry me the most, and they make up the bulk of my tutoring clients.
Keep tooting the horn!
Sandy
If so, you need to something to help.” What is that something? I am paying a fortune in tutoring help and working hard to help him myself but still struggling, frustrated, lack of confidence and motivation, …
My son is in High School now and does not qualify to go to a school for designated students and he is barely keeping his head above water in public high school in grade 8. Help!
To Sharon, I also have a 10 year old daughter who constantly makes careless mistakes. Even after spending hours helping her study for a test, covering every area and making her memorise all facts, she still managed to make careless mistakes in the test. I am wondering if I should just accept the fact that she is who she is and that there’s nothing I can do to change her. I can’t keep drilling her, checking her homework because she has to learn to correct herself. I don’t want to take away her self esteem by scolding her and comparing her to her younger more self sufficient sister. I figure, with time, she will turn around and act more responsibly. I know I did when I suddently hit 14 and became the top 3 students in my class. If she doesn’t turn around, then I should just accept that it is who she is. At least then, she still has her self esteem and can grow up to be a confident adult.