Thursday, November 19, 2015

Middle School Magic

It’s been a minute since I’ve written anything, so I’m just going to savor the fact that I have something real to write about this evening.

I am a teacher. And in my 7 ½ years of teaching, I’ve had handfuls of people ask me, “Why are you a teacher? You could be doing something else! You could make SO much more money! Don’t you wish you had gone to law school? It’s never too late! Yours is a thankless job!”

We sure do feel that way sometimes, so I can’t pretend that it’s always gratifying work or that I HATE the idea of summers off. Some days are really hard. REALLY HARD. I’ve been thrown into walls breaking up fights. Parents have yelled me at because I refused to change a grade when their kid failed my class and couldn’t play a sport. I’ve worked countless hours way past the end of the school day grading, calling parents, and missing out on plans with friends because I had to work. I’ve gotten rotten evaluations and had my ass handed to me by bosses. I’ve watched students get moved around, drop out, and attended some funerals. So, yeah. At the end of the day, it can really be hard to rationalize why I’m still doing this with my life.

But I’ve also had some really moving, compelling reasons to believe that I’m doing the job I was always meant to do. I’ve had former students write to me and tell me that they still use the writing methods I taught them in their college writing class. I’ve had students come back to visit me and tell me that they got into medical school and law school or that they… want to become a teacher. When a kid gets pulled aside and I’ve been able to tell them that I found a book just for them, their face lights up and they find me a week later, and we make a date to sit down and talk about the book. Once, a former class of students called me to speak at a graduation ceremony. So of course there are reasons to stay that can’t be put to a pen and paper.

But tonight I had a pretty uplifting moment that made me turn a corner in my teaching career.

Today I was at school for 12 hours. I taught for 5 periods, gave a tour to some school visitors, had a meeting after school with the other department chairs, and then went into two hours of parent-teacher conferences. Somewhere in there I think I peed, but I can’t be sure.

Parent-teacher conferences in New York City are so surreal. Think of it like (what I imagine to be) speed dating. You set a timer and have parents come through who desire to hear one of two things: 1.) Everything their kid does well. 2.) Everything their kid is failing at. I’ve seen some really hard conversations take place right in front of me, and since you never know what home is like and the pressures that exist on the other side, you have to be extremely careful with your words. Tonight I saw all of the above, so I wasn’t too surprised; it was business as usual. But then the last parent came in to talk.

This parent is extremely active in our school community, and her son is really bright, so I’m sure she’s used to having similar conversations with all of his teachers (probably since before he could talk). But the thing is, we didn’t talk about her son’s academic success or failures. I actually derailed the conversation because I thought it was important for her to know what her eleven year old has done in my class and demonstrated to his peers.

We’ll call this little boy John. John can pretty much blaze through my work. He doesn’t have a ton of friends his age, but he is getting there this year. I suppose he could be fostering those friendships and working toward teenage rebellion by making my life super tough and challenging everything I say, but he chose to go in a different direction. John is in a class that has kids with extra educational needs, and in his class is a boy named Sam. Sam has serious learning disabilities. He isn’t very verbal. He struggles with vision impairment and long-term memory retention. He even has a few anger issues in there, which makes it really challenging on some days to even get him to wear his glasses. (He hides them from me- it’s a really fun game we play… EVERY DAY. Apparently this never gets old [for one of us].)

A few weeks ago, John pulled me aside and said, “I think I’d like to work with Sam.” I told him I thought that was a really kind offer, but that I didn’t want him to feed him answers or take away instructional time from his own learning. He assured me that wouldn’t be the case and that we should just “try it out”.  John even said, “Ms. Son, I don’t even mind when Sam picks his nose or blows spit bubbles, but everyone else is going to lose it, so… how about we work together and see where it goes?”

Now, I really thought that after three or four days of this John was going to get fed up and ask to be moved back to his original group. But what I’ve seen since then has really rocked my world. Every day John and Sam walk into the classroom together. They get started on the Think and Answer and work together to come up with solutions. When the questions get harder, John tries to break them down for Sam or work on a different approach. They even started reading the mentor text together and take turns reading out loud (for a verbally-limited child this is huge). I’ve watched John share his lunch with this kid, talk about video games with Sam, and make sure to include him in as much as possible (both in and out of the classroom). Not many kids talk to Sam. He’s not an easy kid to have a conversation with, and when they do talk to him, it’s pretty limited and based around causing trouble. And John, although he is bright and VERY verbal, likes some things that his peers aren’t into. He likes magic and chess. He’s super into history. Last year he came to the library and wanted everything I had on WWII… as a 6th grader. So needless to say, they are an interesting duo.

Tonight when John’s mother came to parent-teacher conferences, she was the last parent to walk through my door. It was past our end time, and I was exhausted, but I was happy to see her. We didn’t even get to the “school” part of the conversation because I had to let her know that watching her son reach out to another human being who is so desperately lost and isolated most of the time has been one of the greatest privileges I have experienced in my time as a teacher. John gains nothing tangible from helping and befriending Sam. But to watch them together… you would think you were watching a bird and a fish forge a really magical collaboration that is SOMEHOW working. I told her that the point at which I knew I had to say something was when I noticed some magic cards that Sam had out in the hallway before school one morning. He told me that John had given them to him. Then I watched him carefully scoop them together, stack them perfectly, put them back in their case, and cling to them as if they were gold. I asked John about it. He said, “You know, Ms. Son… I just get the impression that Sam doesn’t get a lot of treats. I thought… he could use something nice.”

When I told John’s mother, she started crying. And then I started crying. Pretty soon my principal came in to kick us out of the building and quickly turned around when she saw all of the feelings that had just exploded all over my classroom.


John’s mother told me that we (his teachers) are constantly modeling compassion and empathy that is pouring onto her child, and for that she couldn’t repay us. Her kid can learn most of what I teach him one time through or read extensively about any genre I give him on his own time. But compassion and empathy are taught through demonstration, so on that front I’d like to think that she’s right; that we have played some small part in that when she leaves her child with us every day, five days a week. But it’s all of us. We all do this. Maybe as teachers it comes naturally because it’s in our job description to care and attend to 30 humans at one time…but I think it’s more than that. Giving up your lunch period to tutor or making sure a kid isn’t hungry is part of what we do when we think no one is looking, but it turns out…someone is. They just happen to be 11 years old.