K attended a scheduled Parent-Teacher Meeting this morning together with Alison. He met her class teacher as well as her Mother Tongue teacher.
Both had mostly good things to say about the Allycat. Her English is excellent, her Maths is good and her Chinese, well, her reading and writing are good but her speaking, not so much. When the Chinese teacher found out that we never speak Chinese at home, a light bulb came on and he told K he now understands why Alison is so reticent about speaking up during Mother Tongue class. However, she is otherwise “very communicative”. “You mean she’s talkative,” K said to the form teacher, which earned a chuckle and assent.
The form teacher also told Alison that she really enjoys reading her English compositions, and that she found Alison’s habit of whipping out a book to read as soon as she finished her work a very good one. However, because Ally wants to get to her book as soon as she can, she tends to rush through her work – which results in mistakes, of course. We see this at home too, with her homework and Kumon worksheets.

I love how politically correct this progress report is. EE stands for "exceeding expectations", ME for "meeting expectations" and AE for "approaching expectations".
Then the issue of making Alison a prefect was raised. Alison’s teacher told her, “I wanted to make you a prefect this year but I think you’re not ready. You keep forgetting to bring things to school!” K explained that this was because she had us and Emily to pack her bag for her last year, which reduced the incidence of forgetting things, but this year we have been making her pack her own bag to instill personal responsibility in her. So inevitably there are days when she goes to school without a textbook, or a workbook, or some other item that she is supposed to bring for class. When her form teacher heard K’s explanation, she said it’s a good practice to make Alison responsible for her own stuff, but she won’t put her up as a nominee for prefect until she sees that Alison can make improvements in this area.
So, the gauntlet is thrown. Will Alison get to be a prefect as she has been hoping since last year? Stay tuned.
In other news, Alison walked to the shops to buy something for the very first time last weekend. We’ve been rather reluctant to let her because heaven knows our neighbourhood has some weird stuff going on (in the night, at least) and she’s still rather young to be traipsing around by herself, but she looked at us with pleading eyes and so we said, fine, you can try just the one time. She went with four dollars in her hand and returned safely with a carton of soya bean milk, pleased as punch at having the chance to play the grown-up.
Of course, after that, K started making her do things like fetch him a drink – after all, when you’re grown-up you do the shitty stuff along with the good stuff, right? But I don’t know if we’ll let her repeat this exercise. She knows about stranger danger, but as my mum pointed out, she has to walk past a few doors on the way to the shops and there really is no telling what could happen even if she takes precautions to stay safe. A friend reminded me today to teach her about safe touch – I must find an opportunity to talk to her about that too.







