Children are made to move and exude energy. But here’s a common problem in our classrooms: twenty or more young ones thrown into a crammed room together, sat down at small desks and made to listen, read and write for six or more hours a day.

 

That’s just detrimental for them. Now, imagine throwing a child with learning disability into the mix. It is a recipe of unending frustration for the child.

 

That child knows deep down that he or she ought to be moving, running, and playing, and instead the child is being made to do a thing that he or she positively cannot do at the level that is expected. The child may react in a number of ways, from anger to goofing off to depression.