“ Like most children of the 1950s and 1960s, I started to attend Infant School at the age of five. Within a few months, we were taught basic arithmetic. I was told to put the "big number" on the left hand side and the ‘small number’ on the right hand side. On asking which side this was, we were told that our right hands were the hands that we wrote with.I proceeded to do the sums as follows:-
- 7 + 5 = 21 (i.e. 12 with the big number written on the LHS) - X
- 8 + 9 = 71 X
- 9 + 9 = 81 X
- 6 + 6 = 21 X
- 3 X 5 = 51 X
- 2 X 8 = 61 X
etc.This continued for the whole year. I still have the arithmetic exercise books, with the reversed answers marked ‘X’ and not corrected. The left/right problem only came to light, when I took the school exercise books home at the beginning of the summer holidays and my Mother spotted what was going on.I can still remember that I already knew that something was wrong and I must have guessed that it was to do with right and left, because I kept asking various teachers which hand was my right one. One Teacher pointed to my right hand (WOW) the others ALL said that it is easy to remember, because it is the (left) hand that I write with. The fact that even the teachers could not agree what was left and what was right, only helped to confuse me even further. Even now, if someone says ‘Turn left’ when I am driving and very close to a junction, I need to think first. The directions ‘left’ or ‘right’ aren’t instant, as they should be.Reverting to infant school, despite having an I.Q. of 135 and being good at English etc, I was put into the ‘B’ class, rather than the ‘A’ class.The school policy at that time, was not to keep moving children up and down the classes, so I had to stay in the ‘B’ class until the Eleven Plus exam. There were only twelve places available at the Bridlington High School for pupils from all the Hornsea schools and there were over 30 pupils in the ‘A’ class (and over 30 in the ‘B’ class) of my school so the school did not bother to put the ‘B’ class pupils through the Eleven Plus exam. I was therefore never given a chance to earn a place at the High School.Fortunately, we emigrated to Ghana and I passed the entrance exam for Mfantsipim, Ghana’s Number One school (in the town of Cape Coast) so I got a year of excellent education (but I fell well behind in English History and European Geography).I spent a year at the Ghanaian school, two terms at a high quality, but low morality boarding school at Ramsgate in Kent, then spent the remainder of my schooldays at a good (outward bound) school in Scarborough, Yorkshire.Towards the end of my school career, I gained the ‘O’ and ‘A’ level entrance requirements to study for a degree at Coventry and duly passed the degree exams at the end of the course. The degree award ceremony was cancelled, because of the I.R.A. pub bombings and I received my certificate by post, but I was chosen to represent my college at a degree congregation and shook hands with the Duke of Edinburgh.Fortunately, I got a good job after getting that degree. It is shocking to think that the ignorance of my infant school teachers, which gave me that very poor start, could have continued to have had an effect throughout my educational life. Furthermore, it could have prevented me from getting my degree and that would have stopped me from getting the good job that I wanted.I believe that the effect of that bad start is still with me.Apart from having to think about left and right, I still do not trust my own arithmetic. I always feel the need to be pedantic and I need to recheck my answers, whenever I do any mental, or written arithmetic.”
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Monday, 27 April 2009
Points Left …
2 comments:
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You know, now I look at those photo’s, the more iffy that right click one looks … !
ReplyDeleteAfter almost 60 years of being a lefty I can honestly say it has not been a burden at all (scissors not included). I may have, in the early years, had items thrust into the, for want of a better word, RIGHT(as in correct)hand but those scar's have heeled without memories.
ReplyDeleteI played many sports at school, excelling in a few, Javelin, Rugby and Cricket. Oddly enough I bat right handed but bowl left handed, as I swing right handed in golf to this day, I also kick a football with my right foot. I am happy to lift with either arm and will not stop to think to open a door either handed.
Funny about your comments on the mouse, I never altered my mouse from getting my first computer in 2000 and I actually feel awkward (having just altered it) using my natual hand to click with, still a little patience and yup starting to feel ok. However, before I could mouse and write now I can not, back to mouse on the right.
At work I drive a container lifter, the joystick is on the right, the interanl display and keyboard are on the left, fine by me and 2 other keggy handers out of a staff of 13, and there seems to be a number of lorry drivers that are - - - neither the right or wrong handed, just left handed. Keith, S Yorkshire