Sunday Tribune

Hawking was a star for children

- STACEY STEINBERG

WEDNESDAY was to be a day of action. I went to bed on Tuesday night feeling proud of my son, who the next morning would be participat­ing in the planned school protests against gun violence.

But as I scrolled my Twitter feed one last time before shutting off the lights, I learned that it also would be a day of loss.

Stephen Hawking, perhaps the greatest mind of our time, was gone.

For Stem (Science, technology, engineerin­g and maths) kids, the loss will be felt especially hard. My 11-year-old, upon hearing the news, was devastated.

“There goes one of my lifelong dreams,” he exclaimed through tears. A budding scientist and space enthusiast, he had read all of Hawking’s children’s books, watched documentar­ies about his life and studied his theories.

He had hoped to one day meet him and even dreamed of one day working by Hawking’s side.

“I want to make this more of a happy thing than a sad thing,” my son said after processing the loss with his dad. But how could I help him do that?

I asked therapists and educators how parents can help kids turn their grief into inspiratio­n and action. Here are their suggestion­s:

Talk to kids about overcoming obstacles. Even after being told that he had only a few years to live, Hawking persevered, despite his physical disabiliti­es.

Gayle Evans, a science education lecturer at the University of Florida, encourages families to consider the challenges Hawking overcame each day as “an inspiratio­n to all of us to keep on working even in the face of seemingly insurmount­able obstacles”.

When Evans spoke to her sons about Hawking’s death, she says, they focused not on the sadness, but on “all of the amazing contributi­ons he was able to make while living on this borrowed time and feeling grateful that he lived a long and full life as a brilliant leader in scientific inquiry”.

Use Hawking’s work to remind kids that science isn’t just important, it is interestin­g – and cool.

“Stephen Hawking was a pop-culture physicist,” said Tonya Bervaldi-camaratta, a seventh-grade science teacher at Howard Bishop Middle in Gainesvill­e, Florida.

“He was iconically recognisab­le because of his disability, but also because he was able to transcend pop culture.”

Many of his books were geared towards children. “He made kids feel that being a scientist, even a physicist, was important, interestin­g and cool,” she said.

Create something together to honour Hawking’s memory. “Ritual, across culture and time, is a part of our healing during the grief process,” said Lisa Zucker, a clinical social worker and a grief expert.

When we lose someone we don’t know personally, “it becomes even more important to engage in ritual we create for ourselves since attending the funeral is not an option”, she said.

Kids can do this by writing letters about how Hawking inspired them, or by starting a Stem club in Hawking’s honour.

“It is helpful to draw a comparison for how Hawking lived his life to how a person can process his passing – it doesn’t always have to be easy and sometimes it will be downright sad,” Zucker said.

Teach them that there is no one-size-fits-all way to experience loss. My son’s science teacher, Chloe Why We Should Go Into Space at the George Washington University in Washington DC.THE renowned British physicist Winant, spoke to one of her students about Hawking’s passing.

“I could see a visible grief come over her. I think it’s natural to have feelings surface quickly and intensely when faced with a new loss,” she said.

Winant notes that while some of us are comfortabl­e visibly grieving, we should all be on the lookout for others who are unsure of how to process loss, and ask how they feel.

These individual­s may not know what to say, Winant said, but we should still ask.

“Youngsters experience grief in different ways depending on prior life experience­s and age, as well as the reactions of those around them,” said Karen Pearson, a counsellor at Stephen Foster Elementary.

“Parents and teachers can best support them by allowing time to talk and process feelings and facilitati­ng follow-up support for those students needing more individual attention.”

With the right tools, Hawking’s death can become an opportunit­y to inspire the next generation of thinkers.

I hope my son remembers the day not as a day of loss, but a day of action. During first period, alongside his classmates and supportive teachers, he participat­ed in 17 minutes of silence honouring those who died at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High in Parkland, Florida.

By lunchtime, he was sitting in the office of his middle school counsellor talking about what he’d learned from Hawking’s life, and drawing pictures of the many ways Hawking inspired him.

If he had the chance, my son would tell Hawking he would always be remembered as the greatest and smartest person in the world.

I think if Hawking had the chance to reply, he would remind my son that while he is young, he, too, is great and smart.

But right now I will simply remind him of what Hawking has already said and commend him for making it a day of action:

“Remember to look up at the stars and not down at your feet. Try to make sense of what you see and wonder about what makes the universe exist. Be curious. And however difficult life may seem, there is always something you can do and succeed at.

"It matters that you don’t just give up.” – The Washington Post

 ?? FILE PICTURE: STEFAN ZAKLIN/EPA-EFE/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) ?? Professor Stephen Hawking delivering a speech titled has died at the age of 76.
FILE PICTURE: STEFAN ZAKLIN/EPA-EFE/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) Professor Stephen Hawking delivering a speech titled has died at the age of 76.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa