S.G.
There is so much I want to commment on and I dont know where to start. You sound like you have one amazing kid and I am so glad that you can see those parts that are out standing. After reading your message I sat here thinking about myself and who I am, because the person you described was me at that age.
Class room instruction is a cookie cutter life style. When you leave school and graduate you enter a world that is anything but cookie cutter. Some kids conform easily to what is expected, other kids are so individualistic that the issue is not about conforming but about the ideas bouncing around in his head.
I could do homework and know that it was good, and then forget to turn it in and fail. I would day dream during an assignment and be shocked when everyone in class was finished. I just was not into the things that were being taught. Yet, I held a B average without even trying. I was watched closely by my teachers to make sure the home work got handed in, until I hit junior high. Things changed and much more was expected out of me. I also found that the things I was interested in, were becoming more and more important to me and school was becoming less and less.
I remember telling my mother that I wish there was a way to go to school and learn, but stay home and do it, so I could study the important things in life. I was talking about home schooling and did not even know that it existed at the time.
Your son seems to know what he needs and he is asking you to help him with it. Many families home school with young children, I did it. Please, do not take this message as a plug for home schooling, every family is different and you have to want to do it.
Back to your son and his creative way of thinking. Creative at this age is sometimes seen as distractions getting in the way of what the adults want you to do. Yes, he has obligations but those obligations can be tailored to meet his creative side. Writing an essay about pollenation may not float his boat, but writing an essay about the way a bee stays air born may. The point is the lesson at hand and creative people do not take in information and regurgitate it back. They think about it, roll it around in their heads for hours, days, even weeks. He gets excited about things because to him they are important, listen closely to what it is that he is excited about. you may find that it is not the actual game itself but a component. He wants to learn, you have described a learner, he is learning. He is not returning the learning to the adults in his life the way they would like it, that does not mean the process is not happening. Failure is not happening, failure to achieve a certain grade is happening. To teach a creative child is a challenge, but ohhhh so rewarding.
I wish someone would have taken the time to understand who I was at that age. I wish they would have seen that I was intelligent, thoughtful, and had dreams that went beyond getting a grade.
I dropped out of school at 16, and spent several years trying to understand why I was such a failure. One day a very wise man told me, you are only a failure if you stop being who you are. Wow, how profound, he saw me, he saw who I was and he knew I was much more than anyone had ever seen before. He told me that the world was mine, go and get it.
I am now an interior decorator. I have belonged to many business organizations and am well respected within the community. I have sat on the board of directors of one national organization and one local. I am a passionate artistic photographer and I am in the process of writing a book. No one from my school would have guessed, no one saw me for who I really was.
You can see your son, I am begging you, do not let him die inside because he is not cut from the slice of life that the rest of the world is. He is not failing, he is only failing to meet the expectations around him, but he is succeeding in being the person that he truly is.
Home schooling is an option, you might want to consider it. I have raised one like me through home schooling, and 2 that would have done fine in the school setting. The one like me, would have been labled a failure in a regular school setting. In fact he was, he is my oldest and I pulled him out in 5th grade. He was "failing", he successfully became who he is and we are so proud of him. He is creative and motivated, finding life interesting in a way that most of us would not. He is happy, though, and I have never regretted allowing his creativity lead the way.
See your son through eyes of love, listen to what he is saying, not what you think he is saying. You will begin to see a person who is successful beyond your imagination.