Showing posts with label teaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teaching. Show all posts

Monday, August 29, 2011

A New Beginning


Long time no blog. While 99.99% of our new house is absolutely wonderful the other 00.01% leaves us temporarily without internet access. I’m so disconnected. Fortunately we’ll be back online in just a few weeks. Until then I’ll have to rely on free wi-fi  (which I’ve found is becoming pretty common in more and more places).

In the time since my last post a lot has happened. The boys and I hiked fifty miles through North Carolina. Some highlights included one six-mile climb, three observation towers, and twenty-one really cool mushrooms. We again escaped the rain and, although I crammed an air cast into my pack, I somehow avoided yet another ankle sprain. Good times.

Not long after returning we began school. Having spent a couple of weeks moving about from place to place (while we waited for our house to be finished) it was nice to return to some normalcy. Well, the sights, sounds, and rhythms were normal. The kids were not.  After three hundred and sixty days  of learning, laughing, and playing together, my group from the past two years moved on to a new teacher. They are just two doors down (literally eight feet away) but it’s weird to see them walk by and not come into the room. Many wave, and a few even run over for a hug, but they’re on to bigger and better things in fourth grade. They’re on their way to outgrowing me.

In the meantime I’ve been busy getting to know a new group. New groups take a while to adjust to. There are always a few days where you’re kind of mourning the loss of your old friends and wondering just who these new ones really are. Who are the funny ones? Who’s going to recommend books to me? Who loves to share stories? Who has a big voice that will lead us all in song?

The big voice is actually quite important. I can’t hit more than two or three notes so it’s always critical to have someone able and willing to lead the rest of the class in song without having us so far off-key that the neighboring teachers come barging in with hands clasped over their ears. It winds up this year it’s Laila. She sings out strong and has a beautiful voice. I’m so thankful for her. She has us all sounding pretty doggone good for only two weeks together.

We’re taking it slowly. The first week we learned two songs. This past week we learned two more. We’re generally a bit shaky for a day or two but we figure them out in time.  Hoping to help, I asked my old class to come in this past Friday to sing with us. I was hopeful they would jump in to help this new crop of singers find the melody and develop enough confidence to sing out strong. Boy did they ever! 

The fourth graders could have forgotten the smaller nuances of the songs.  They even could have come in and acted a bit too cool to sing with us. But they didn’t. They sang so loud and so joyfully. It was such a touching moment. It was another small reminder of how special our time together was.

This new group is warming up. They’re about ready to shake off the rust of summer and do some wonderful things. Among them will be to sing a lot of songs and even write a few together along the way. I can’t wait to see their personalities come to the surface as we develop a strong bond of our own. And, rest assured, we will. Two years from now I’ll be watching them pass by our classroom door as they steal a quick peek on their way to fourth grade. And I’ll long for the days we will have spent together. 

Sunday, June 12, 2011

To Hell in a Handbasket




Like most teachers I know I've been spending a portion of these summer days preparing for next fall. I read professional books, look back over some of my notes from this past year, and dream about changes for this next group coming in. I hope to be a better teacher. And well I should, given the state of education today. Just today I read...

If you read the newspaper, you know the American education system has gone past the point where it is simply failing to educate our young, and is now actively reducing their intelligence. Hardly a day goes by when you don't see an article like this:

WASHINGTON -- The National Association of People Who Worry About These Things (NAPWWATT) today reported that this year's graduating high-school seniors are even dumber than last year's, many of whom are still stumbling around the back of the auditorium trying to get their commencement gowns off. NAPWWATT reported that 66 percent of this year's seniors failed a nationwide scholastic test consisting of the question, "What does a duck say?"

This is pretty pathetic. When I was in high school, we were expected to know what a duck says. Oh, sure, I've forgotten a lot of this stuff, but at least I used to know it, which gives me the right to express smug contempt thinly disguised as grave concern for the young people of today.


This is Dave Barry sarcastically poking fun at our education system. The fact that this piece, Why Johnny is Dum, is making light of the fact that the media feels as though American students are getting less and less intelligent each year isn't such a surprise. What gets me is that this was written twenty-six years ago. If our kids were on the downward slide in 1985 imagine how dim-witted they must be by now.

I, of course, would have to disagree - at least with regards to the kids I've known over the past ten or fifteen years. Each spring I see what my students are capable of doing and know full-well that they are much more complex thinkers than I ever was in grade school. Though that's not really saying much. I was in grade school back in 1985.

But like all of us, teachers included, Dave Barry truly wants to see our kids become better learners and achieve more. Although, his motives for this may be a bit misplaced:

Like any responsible parent, I want my son to get the best possible education, because I am sick to death of having to read his Masters of the Universe comic books to him. All the male characters wear loincloths, all the females have breasts like grain silos, and all the dialogue sounds like this (from The Stench of Evil):

SKELETOR: Stinkor, with your powerful SMELL, I would like you to spread your FOUL ODOR where the air is clean, and bring MISERY to a place that is full of happiness!

STINKOR: YES! YES! I revel in all that is FOUL!

Our goal as a nation must be to develop, by next fall, an educational system that will teach my son how to read this drivel for himself, ideally on his first day.

A lofty goal, to be sure. Maybe I oughta get back to work.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Saying Goodbye

Tomorrow is Day 180 - our final day of school. After more than 2,000 hours of working and laughing alongside this group of kids I know it's going to be hard to say goodbye. They've been anticipating this. Yesterday they shared with me a song they wrote for me a few weeks ago while I was away on an overnight study with the 4th and 5th grades. Written to the tune of We Will Rock You, it was titled We Will Miss You. Just as they started to sing it to me Madison brought me a box of tissues.

"Here," she said. "You're going to need these!"

As it turned out I didn't. The song was really fun but to their dismay I was a rock. Today they were excited to reveal my end-of-the-year gift. They gathered around our classroom window to block my view of what awaited me out there. Just before the big moment someone called out, "He's going to cry!" I sure was grateful to find a lovely new bench sitting beside our pond and garden (last year's gifts). There was even a thoughtful plaque for the bench thanking me for all the great learning and music we've experienced together over these two years. Knowing that next year I'm going to have kids climbing in and out of our window each day to enjoy that bench I was both thankful and touched. Yet still no tears.

"Mr. H, I'll give you five bucks if you cry tomorrow!" Madison said. It should be noted here that Madison's favorite books are the ones that make you cry at the end.

"Yeah," Rose said. "You have to cry tomorrow."

"Just wait," I assured them. "You never know."

Statistically speaking I'm pretty much a sure thing when it comes to tearfully saying goodbye when someone moves away or when I have to say goodbye on the last day of school. I remember a couple of years ago, while teaching at a different school, I couldn't bring myself to tear the classroom down. The kids were already gone for the summer yet I couldn't bring myself to stack the desks and chairs in the corner of the room until the very last moment. I didn't want to work in an empty room. I was as excited as anyone to begin my summer but at the same time I sort of hoped everyone would just come back on Monday morning for another week together.

In many ways I'm ready for this summer to begin. We're building a house and are excited to be moving out into "the woods" in a little over a month. The kids all have fun camps and baseball tournaments planned. We'll be driving down to Florida to visit my sister over Father's Day weekend. I have lots of books I plan to read and look forward to playing many, many games with the kids.And I'm really looking forward to staying up "late" and sleeping past six.

But I'm not in too much of a hurry. I don't want tomorrow to go too quickly. We have a few chores left to do. I want us all to get cozy on the floor one last time to fall into our books. And most of all I want to make sure there's plenty of time to sit together in a circle and say goodbye. And at the very end I'll insist they each take a turn coming over to give me a hug.

After all that I'm sure they'll get just what they wanted.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Good Reads

Have you read anything good lately? I just finished a really great book titled The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate. It tells the story of Calpurnia, a twelve-year-old girl in 1899, who feels trapped by the fact that she is coming of age as the twentieth century nears yet her life offers her no hope of doing anything more than cooking, cleaning, sewing, and throwing parties. Over the course of a year she develops a sweet relationship with her cantankerous grandfather as he teaches her to observe and inquire into the natural world. She soon falls in love with science but struggles to see how she will ever be allowed to pursue this passion now that her mother wants her to begin learning the "science of housewivery."

Speaking of good reads, we spent some time in class today thinking about the many good books and other texts we've shared together over the past two years. We keep a chart, smartly titled "Texts We've Read", where we try to document each of the texts we read together in class. Listed are a collection of picture books, chapter books, informational books, newspaper articles, poems, songs, excerpts, and so on. Each nine weeks another of my students inherits the job of "Book Recorder" to write these down for us. To date we have 289 texts recorded. We figured today that there are many other texts we forgot to record along the way- especially the droves of original pieces the kids created and shared out. Still, 289 is a pretty good number. Our goal is to get that up to 300 by Friday.

We began preparing for these final eleven reads by revisiting the titles we've enjoyed in the past 357 days. The kids created a table in their notebooks and began reading through the charts to tally each book under either: Loved It, Liked It, It Was Okay, Didn't Care for It, or Don't Remember It. I did this too. In the end there were more than 80 books that I loved, another 80+ that I liked, around 20 that were okay, three that I didn't care for, and a surprisingly high number that I forgot about.

We didn't get a chance for everyone to finish but we did take time to create a list of our favorite books. From these the kids voted on which they'd most like to revisit in our final days together, as they prepare to move on to the fourth grade. They offered up a really nice list, put their heads down, and then cast five votes. When all was said and done I was amazed by their selections. There were some really wonderful books in there with beautiful language and stirring story lines. Given that many cubbies are filled with the sophomoric likes of Captain Underpants, Dear Dumb Diary, and Diary of a Wimpy Kid it was nice to see them pick some better quality books as their favorites. Had they filled our queue with The Recess Queen or Click, Clack, Moo I might have dropped into a deep depression. Okay, maybe not a deep depression, they are both fine books, but I would have been disappointed.

Here's a sampling of our favorites:

All the Places to Love is a beautiful book by Patricia MacLachlan that tells the story of a family teaching their newest member, a baby girl, of all the wonderful places to love on and around their prairie farm. As with all MacLachlan books the language is poetic. I used to have the first few pages of this book memorized so that I could look right into the kids' eyes as I read those powerful lines and slowly turned the pages. This book has become a go-to book for many purposes. It's funny but I actually forgot reading this book to the kids but thankfully they had not. They not only remembered but also put it in their top eight.




A very, very funny book! This story tells of the power structures in place when a new baby comes home. Soon the baby is making demands and setting up his "office" in the middle of the living room. You'd think the kids would fail to catch most of the humor but they don't. They laugh and laugh the whole way through. This book is the perfect gift for any expectant parents. However, it'd be even better a few months in. Only then could they truly appreciate it.



In this story Jane Yolen tells the story of a small northeastern town who decides to sell itself to Boston so that it can be scooped right out of the Earth to make way for a reservoir that will provide the big city with the water they so badly need. Graves are dug up, trees are cut down, houses are demolished or moved. In the end a little girl sits in a canoe with her grandfather as he points down into the water reminding her of all those important places that helped shape their lives and families. We've read this one three times already yet they still voted, by a very wide margin, to read it again before summer sets in.


After Lester Laminack's mother-in-law was diagnosed with Alzheimer's Disease his son became confused as to how she could remember the smallest details from her past but could not even recognize his face. Faced with how best to help him understand, Laminack wrote this book. There are a lot of books about Alzheimer's out there but this one is among the very best. The first page is among the best first pages I've ever read. This is the type of story, both serious and sad, that you would expect might make kids uncomfortable. Yet, they love it. I'm always a bit surprised by how warmly they embrace it yet so thankful they do.

There were a few others on our list. We have eleven books in all to read in just three days. Given that two of those days are early dismissals and there's a bevy of other things going on right now I know our work is cut out for us. I'm sure we'll manage.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Mother's Day

What if you could write a letter and deliver it to your former self or someone you love, at some key point in the past, warning of mistakes to avoid? Or encouraging yourself to persevere? Or hinting at the many good times that lie ahead? My classroom kids and I recently gave this a shot. With Mother's Day quickly approaching I was determined to have them create something special their moms would enjoy (especially after having forgotten to do anything at all last year).

The kids and I created prewriting notes around our childhoods: stories you've been told about when you were a baby, accidents you had, great vacations you've been on, the best gifts you've ever received, cute things you've said, trouble you've gotten into, sad things that have happened, and things your mom has done to make you feel loved. We took these notes and used them to write letters to our mothers. Letters that might be delivered the morning before our own deliveries - our birth day.

I was worried this might be a little difficult but what they came up with was both amazing and heart-felt. Their notes moved from humorous to nostalgic to touching.

"Don't be alarmed by those pains in your stomach. You're just having a baby. Me in particular."

"Some day you're going to decide to have another baby for me to play with. I'm going to hit her and even push her off the couch. Remember that I still love her though."

"We're going to go on some great vacations together. Don't be surprised if I never want to leave. We'll visit..."

"You might be tempted to buy me socks or underwear for my birthday but I'm going to like toys. I'm going to really LOVE toys!"

"You're going to be the best mom. And I'm going to be your 'special' girl."

After we had our first drafts complete we worked hard to create our own stationary for these letters. The kids carefully drew hearts and swirlies and dots.

"Please don't draw Gamecocks or footballs," I pleaded.

"But my mom LOVES the Gamecocks and football," a few protested.

"I'm sure you think she does," I countered. "That's part of what makes her such a great mom. But for this one day let's give her something other than sports."

After completing their stationary we took more than an hour to meticulously transfer our drafts onto the paper. I was so amazed by their work I ran them down to the office to make copies for my files before the originals were laminated and sent home. I hope they were well received.

***** ***** ***** ***** *****

June 11, 1974

Dear Mom,

Today is a BIG day. You are about to give birth to a tiny baby boy. He won't stay tiny very long, though. Soon he will become fat. Really fat. He's going to cry a lot too. Even more than most other babies. Nothing you do will help. He will scream through your very best efforts to rock him, walk him, and sing to him. Remember that this is not his fault. He cannot help it. With time and patience this will pass and he will fill your days with laughter and smiles.

You'll want to keep a close eye on this little guy as he learns to crawl. Keep him in your sights - especially when going out of the house. He might one day crawl away from you, pull down his diaper, and leave a "present" on someone else's floor. Though it may not seem like it at the time this will one day be very funny. There will be other mistakes made. Should you decide to dress him up for a studio photograph you may want to consider having him use the potty first. This will save you some frustration and him some shame.

There will be many good times ahead. He will say silly things like "pamshoo" for shampoo and "mertmane" for airplane. He'll cruise the house on his Tike bike. He'll grow to be a good listener and baseball crazy. Time will fly as you take family trips to the Ozarks and to Arkansas. You will celebrate the excitement of new pets and cry together when they die. There will be church gatherings, movies, and games. Most of all there will be laughter. Hold on to as many of these moments as you can. They are easier to forget than you could ever imagine.

You're going to make a great mom. You'll give him lots of hugs, plenty of Band-aids, and a lot of love. All your hard work will help him grow up and go to college, become a teacher, and have a loving family of his own.

So brace yourself not just for this one BIG day but for the many smaller ones that will follow. They are all just as important and just as special. Enjoy your journey!

Love,
Your son, Chris

Saturday, April 16, 2011

When Lyrics Go Bad

A few days ago I picked up my guitar and began strumming it just before the end of our school day.

'I'm thinking maybe we could take what we've been learning about slavery, abolitionists, and the Civil War and write another song together," I said. "A lot of the stuff we've been noticing and talking about would be good to share out. Do you have any ideas?"

This is often how it starts. Not always, but often. I notice something we've been doing that might make a decent song and we start fiddling around with it ten and fifteen minutes at a time until we have enough to really dig in and flush it out. I kept strumming.

"So what do you think?" I asked. "Who has a line to get us started?"

There's a time for hand-raising. Songwriting generally is not that time. A couple of the kids called out the first thing that came to their mind.

"Slavery is wrong!"
"It's not our color but what's under our skin!"
"Our differences don't matter!"

I nodded my head in agreement.

"Those are some powerful ideas," I said. "We just need to make them sound like a song lyric. Something we'd hear on the radio. How about the whole idea that many of the heroes we've been learning about aren't the ones you hear about on television or in the textbook? Could we do something with that?"

Madison's face lit up. "You don't have to be Superman to be a hero."

"Yeah," I said. "You don't have to be Superman. And you don't have to have a gun or sword."

"That's good," someone called out.

That was as far as we got. We threw a few more things around but they didn't stick. Later I shared this with my buddy Tim who teaches next door. Tim writes all kinds of songs with his kids that are often far more sophisticated than our simple rhythms and melodies. I told him about our one line, You don't have to be Superman to be a hero, as well as Jack's idea to include information about the abolitionists we admired and Hannah's idea to end the song with a message that we could all be heroes and stand up for what we feel is right.

"Oh man," he said. "That's it. That song will just write itself."

Except it didn't. We've worked at it a little bit to no avail. Sometimes the process is so easy. Other times not. Songwriting can be a challenge. Even for the pros.

Last weekend Tricia and I were about to go to bed when I picked up the remote and flipped through the stations. I came across Austin City Limits, a live-performance music show that's been around for 35 years (making it the longest running music show on television). ACL features all sorts of musicians, from Willie Nelson to Jack Johnson to Etta James. Some are legends, others are a flash-in-the-pan, and a few are bands you've never even heard of. I imagine it's the variety that makes the show so cool. I hardly ever watch it but I certainly appreciate that it exists.

So I waited to find out who was going to be on and was excited to see it was REM. Growing up, they were one of my favorite bands. I could name at least one or two dozen songs of theirs that I still really love. That's not true of many of the bands I liked as a teenager.

I settled in as Tricia, realizing we weren't going to bed after all, collapsed into her chair and quickly fell to sleep. A few songs in it was obvious this wasn't going to be a "greatest hits" performance. The songs were all new and, sadly, not that great. Worse of all were the lyrics. They were just silly.

I feel like an alligator
Climbing up the escalator
Climbing up the escalator
I feel strong

I feel like an aviator pilot

Thinks you wouldn't buy it
I'm feeling violent
Beat your bleeding eye in
Hey, hey, alligator, you've got a lot to learn
I have, have got a lot to learn



Uh, what? I can only hope the next song is better.

I would dare you, but I know I don't need to
You're going to do just what you want to
You're going to take the leading chair at the fairground
You're going to sing the praises of your fruit

Mine smell like honey, uh!

Mine smell like honey, uh!
Mine smell like hu- hu- hu- honey, uh!


Guess not. Suddenly I found myself doubting my entire taste in music. Could the old songs have been this bad? The power of internet soon helped me find my answer.


Orange Crush (An old favorite of mine)



Follow me, don’t follow me
I’ve got my spine, I’ve got my orange crush
Collar me, don’t collar me
I’ve got my spine, I’ve got my orange crush
We are agents of the free
I’ve had my fun and now its time to
Serve your conscience overseas
(over me, not over me)
Coming in fast, over me

Radio Free Europe (Another old favorite)

Beside yourself if radio's gonna stay.
Reason: it could polish up the grey.
Put that, put that, put that up your wall
That this isn't country at all

Raving station, beside yourself

Keep me out of country in the word
Deal the porch is leading us absurd.
Push that, push that, push that to the hull

That this isn't nothing at all


Ugh. When I was younger I think I just assumed I wasn't smart enough, or at least deep enough, to understand the meanings of these songs. Now, though, I think maybe they just don't make any sense at all.


So I set out to find other examples of really bad lyrics. Many of these proved that making sense still doesn't make it good...



"There's an insect
In your ear
If you scratch
It won't disappear"

U2 - Staring at the Sun

I guess it was an easy rhyme?

"There were plants
And birds
And rocks
And things"

America - Horse With No Name

This is a popular choice with many people. Things?

"Coast to coast
L.A. to Chicago"


Sade - Smooth Operator


In her defense she wasn't from the States. But still...


He could throw that speed ball by you
Make you look like a fool

Bruce Springstein - Glory Days

A fastball is a pitch in baseball. A speedball....well you'd have to ask Jim Belushi. If you could.



Someone always playing corporation games
Who cares they’re always changing corporation names
We just want to dance here someone stole the stage
They call us irresponsible write us off the page

Starship - We Built This City

Picking on Starship is almost TOO easy. Fight the power, Starship!


Muskrat Susie
Muskrat Sam
Do the jitterbug out in muskrat land
And they shimmy
And Sammy's so skinny

Captain and Tennille - Muskrat Love

This song truly makes me wonder why I was so concerned about the forced rhymes my third graders were coming up with. Compared to this we were pretty much functioning on the same plane as Don McClean.

My all time favorite, though, comes from Alanis Morissette. She wrote a song titled "Ironic." Sadly, nothing in it was at all ironic. A bummer, yes. Ironic, no.

An old man turned ninety-eight
He won the lottery and died the next day
It's a black fly in your Chardonnay
It's a death row pardon two minutes too late
And isn't it ironic... don't you think

It's like rain on your wedding day
It's a free ride when you've already paid
It's the good advice that you just didn't take
Who would've thought... it figures

Mr. Play It Safe was afraid to fly
He packed his suitcase and kissed his kids goodbye
He waited his whole damn life to take that flight
And as the plane crashed down he thought
"Well isn't this nice..."
And isn't it ironic... don't you think

It's like rain on your wedding day
It's a free ride when you've already paid
It's the good advice that you just didn't take
Who would've thought... it figures

Well life has a funny way of sneaking up on you
When you think everything's okay and everything's going right
And life has a funny way of helping you out when
You think everything's gone wrong and everything blows up
In your face

A traffic jam when you're already late
A no-smoking sign on your cigarette break
It's like ten thousand spoons when all you need is a knife
It's meeting the man of my dreams
And then meeting his beautiful wife
And isn't it ironic...don't you think
A little too ironic...and, yeah, I really do think...

It's like rain on your wedding day
It's a free ride when you've already paid
It's the good advice that you just didn't take
Who would've thought... it figures

Life has a funny way of sneaking up on you
Life has a funny, funny way of helping you out
Helping you out




There are of course many, many examples of really good lyrics. Some even come from REM. However, this post is getting awfully lengthy so I'll save those for another day. In researching these lyrics I came across a story about Michael Stipe and his lyric writing. He evidently commented during a show in 1999 that people shouldn't spend their time on the internet trying to make sense of lyrics. Some songs, he said, make sense and others don't. I guess so long as they sound good in your ear that should be enough.


So that may well become my mantra as we work to finish our song. It may be pedestrian. It may be trite. But hopefully it'll sound good in our ears.


You don't need to be Superman
To make a difference in our land
You just have to know right from wrong
And trust your heart - - - stay strong

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Young Authors

I had the pleasure of spending a day with a really great group of writers today. Sure, there were published authors like Lesa Cline-Ransom, Stephen Swinburne, Anthony Fredericks, and Sneed Collard III. But they weren't my favorites. No, the highlight of my day was the ten fourth grade authors who entertained and amazed me with their antics, smiles, and love of reading and writing.

Together we spent a little over five hours in Ballentine, South Carolina at the Young Authors Conference. This conference provides an opportunity for fine young writers around the state to spend a day listening to the life stories and advice of published authors from around the country. If they had anything like this when I was a kid I sure never heard anything about it. What an opportunity.

Here were a few highlights...

*   Not long after meeting one another we sat down to await our first author visit and wrote a poem together. Thanks to the inspiration from Deanna's story about a snake that once blew up in her uncle's microwave we wrote the following acrostic poem together. For those who are not familiar with acrostics, the first letter of each line spells out the topic of the poem as you read down.

Mice should never be put
In the microwave
Cause they will
Royally blow up and get
On your mother's
Walls
And she'll be
Vacuuming guts off
Everything

*  At lunch the kids had the greatest conversation about their favorite books. Since only two of them knew each other we were all pretty much strangers. This created the perfect opportunity for each of them to share the authors and stories they love most. "Oh my gosh, Blood on the River is THE best book ever written," exclaimed Autumn. "You HAVE to read it!" This went on and on so I pulled out a small notebook from my backpack and asked everyone to tell me one book that I just have to buy for my classroom. The list they created was great: Blood on the River, Savvy, Percy Jackson, Rainbow Fairies, Taste of Blackberries, The Hunger Games, Found, 39 Clues, How to Steal a Dog, and A Dog on His Own. "Perfect," I told them. "I'll get these and tell my readers how much you loved them. I'm sure they won't be able to wait!"

*  "Have you read Little Women," Deanna asked me. I hadn't. "Well, it's really good. I only just started it and haven't read much though. We have to take an Accelerated Reader test after each book to earn points and we have to have 4.2 points every week. So I can't read too much of Little Women at a time because I have to keep reading shorter books to get my points." "How sad!" I responded, trying to bite my tongue and not make a judgmental statement about her teacher. "Yeah, but when I get my points for this nine weeks then I'll be able to read it more."

* On our way back from lunch Jonathan, one of only two boys in our group of ten, told me "I'm writing this series right now called 'Framed.' It's about...". He joyfully told me all about it. You could tell it was important to him. "I've only just finished the first book but I'm going to be starting the second one soon."

*  "Do you publish books here?" Ezekiel asked. "What?" I asked. "Do you publish books here? You know, when you finish them?" "Oh," I said. "I don't teach here. But I'm sure they do. At least I hope so. Don't you? My class actually publishes their writing to a blog on the internet so that everyone can read it and respond to it." "Cool," he answered. I later noticed him writing during one of the presentations. He was jotting something down in the back of his writing notebook. During a break I asked him if I could see it. He had created a list of his favorite songs and was adding to it each day. He was currently on #73. Jonathan grabbed the notebook from me and started rifling through Ezekiel's pages. "Chris, you've got to see this!" he said. "He's writing this really long story." Sure enough there was a story titled Jake the Spy. The cover page read A slight of comedy...A lot of action. Flipping through it I saw that it was seven chapters long and consisted of twenty or so pages. "Wow," I said. "Yeah, I've been writing it since I was in second grade. I'm in the fourth grade now."

*  "When are we going to write?" Jaden asked during lunch. "Yeah," someone else joined in. "Is this all listening or will we get to write, too?" I didn't know for certain but I was  pretty certain it would be all sitting and listening. As great as these authors were, the kids wanted to show what they could do as well. I didn't blame them. During one of the sessions Jaden sat at my side writing poems and passing them over to me to read.

Cats like to
fidget with playtoys
in stores and
cages that may
not hold
gorillas
but do hold
peacocks

She also wrote an acrostic using the word "Boring." I'm not sure it was so much the authors she was frustrated with but the lack of opportunity to write together. There were others sneaking away small moments to write. I saw Autumn working in her notebook as well. I asked to read it and saw that she had a descriptive piece about a lake. A passage from her piece read "Out of the reeds a family of swans glide silently behind each other breaking the lake surface into a pond of ripples. Dragonflies play hide and seek darting behind the reeds." The whole piece was really cool and she was proud when I asked if I could jot some of it down into my own notebook. "I want to share this with some other writers I know," I told her.

* Kylie told me "I'm going to write these two books called Crime Scene Kate and Medusa Vacation. One is a about a girl who solves crime and the other is about Medusa going to the beach and turning people to stone." "Oh my gosh," I said. "Can I write that down? I'd like to share your ideas with my kids. Those sound like they'll make really interesting stories."

*  Annelise shared with me a list of "bad" words she had memorized. With the help of Autumn she explained that they weren't really BAD words so much as WEAK words. Words you should avoid in your writing. The list she recited included: very, absolutely, am, is, are, was, were, be, been, bring, do, did, does, have, has, had, may, might, must, can, could, shall, should, will, would, really, bad, a lot, and all right. Hearing this, Jasmine responded "Absolutely isn't a weak word. It's juicy!"

*Kylie shared the drawings of horses she had made a few days ago. They were truly amazing. Everyone was in awe of her artistic abilities. She's clearly going to illustrate her own stories. Her favorite type of story? Animal fiction.

By the end of the day I was a bit exhausted from waking up early on a Saturday and sitting for such long periods of time. However, I hated for it to end. We had a great time together, heard a lot of great advice on writing, and had some wonderful conversations around reading and writing. Best of all, my daughter Harper was there to share it with me. She loved the group just as much as I did and was quick to jump in with her own favorite books and stories. On the way to the conference she sat in the back seat working on a biography she's writing about Paula Deen. After the conference she was anxious to buy a book or two and jump in line to get autographs from the authors. Not athletes or movie stars. Authors.

At some  point the kids asked why I was writing down so many of the things they were talking about. I told them I was going to go home and write about our day together and post it to the internet. "All these authors told us to write about what we know," I said. "That's what I'm planning to do." I gave a few of them the address to this blog so they could read about themselves. So here it is guys. I hope you enjoyed it. You all are truly amazing and I hope to see you again next year!

Sunday, February 20, 2011

The Worst Kind of Teacher

I had a bad day last Thursday. I don't mention these all that often because they tend to be minor blips on a much grander screen, not-to-mention the fact that there's something to be said for being positive. Still, I came into school really exhausted from a late night at class and a variety of responsibilities and concerns, beyond teaching, looming over my head.

The morning went well enough. My buddy Tim, who teaches next door, stopped by to talk with us about a favorite book of his that we had just finished reading and loved as well. There were visitors who enjoyed hearing the new Revolutionary War song we are writing and watching the kids discuss and reflect on their reading.

Our day is broken up into two instructional halves by a break in the middle that includes lunch, a special area (such as art or pe), and recess. When we returned from recess the next two hours included: a broken ruler, someone calling a friend "a jerk", another person completely tuning out all of a math demonstration, a group that refused to work with one another, a number of people who didn't listen to directions, and a loud outburst immediately following a small talk about our expectations for one another when working on a particular project.

These types of days are inevitable when working with humans, not to mention the nine-year-old variety. Not so surprisingly these days often occur on the very day when I've not had enough sleep, I'm beginning to feel sick, or I'm feeling a bit anxious about something outside of school. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that the thirty-six year old variety is to blame as well. It happens. Fortunately, though, only about three or four days a year.

Perhaps for Natalie Munroe, though, it happened much more often. If you've not heard of her she's a high school teacher in Central Buck, Pennsylvania who, like me, keeps a blog for her friends and family to enjoy. Recently this blog has gotten her into a whole heap of trouble. It seems she took her bad day at school and made it public. Very public.

"They are disobedient, disrespectful oafs. Noisy, crazy, sloppy lazy, LOAFERS."

Ouch.

"[They] are out of control," she wrote. "They curse, discuss drugs, talk back, argue for grades, complain about everything, fancy themselves entitled to whatever they desire, and are just generally annoying."

That seems a bit inappropriate.

Listing comments she'd like to write on report cards, she wrote "I hear the trash company is hiring"; "I called out sick a couple of days just to avoid your son"; and "Just as bad as his sibling. Don't you know how to raise kids?"

Now she's gone completely overboard. Oddly enough I shared an article about her blog with my class on Thursday morning, before our problems.

"Maybe the kids are bored because of her," Jillian suggested. "You have to be interesting."

This, by the way, is very true.

"You can't talk about kids that way," argued Brandon.

"Yeah," said Patton. "That's really insulting."

"High schoolers are sometimes...well, they don't listen," suggested Atira. "She looks interesting and fun in the picture but they're all talking. She has the right to share this but not be all insulting."

"Yeah," said Skyler. "She could have not said it in a bad way."

"I don't know," I said. "Do you think sharing this helped to solve a problem or just make it worse?"

Skyler later asked a great question, "Why would she even teach them and then insult them?"
"We were discussing that too," said Jenna. "Why is she even a teacher if she feels like that?"

Why is she even a teacher if she feels like that? I'd love for someone to ask her. Sadly there are droves of people who support her. There are websites being erected praising her for "tough love" and holding the kids accountable.

As for our bad day, we had a twenty minute talk before going home to see if maybe we couldn't find a solution that would ensure a better tomorrow. A few kids talked about consequences but many others suggested helping one another by letting them know when they are starting to head down the wrong path. This made sense.

I finished the day by warning the kids that I would be blasting them on my blog. I tried to dream up some well chosen words that might spark an uproar from students, parents, and community members. They laughed knowing I'd never do such a thing. Perhaps that was the best medicine for the day. Laughter.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Conversations

I was recently listening to a teacher relate a story about something that had happened in her classroom. She was in the practice, at the end of writing workshop, of allowing her kids time to step up and share a bit of what they had been working to create in their writing journals. At the end of these share sessions she would then open up her own writing notebook and share something she had been writing. A wonderful practice, it was meant to model good writing as well as demonstrate that she writes in a variety of genres and for a variety of purposes. It was also a great opportunity to show her kids how she, too, struggles through many parts of her own writing process.

So one day as the kids finished up sharing their pieces she reached for her journal and someone called out “Alright, now it’s time for the BEST piece!” Stunned, she slumped back into her chair realizing she had done something very wrong. She had sent a negative message to her young writers without ever knowing it had happened. In addition to modeling herself as a writer she had also given the impression that when all of their pieces were out of the way she would show them what really good writing sounds like. Oops!

This can happen awfully easily. I see it occasionally in my own teaching; particularly when I feel the need to have the final say, to set the conversation straight, or to validate everyone’s comments with some sort of response. I find that when I do this too often I teach the kids to speak to me instead of to one another. It creates the sense that I am the one - the only one, really- who determines the importance and relevance of their thoughts, feelings, and questions.

Fortunately, many of us work hard to avoid these interactions and messages. When they present themselves we work to find ways to fix what we’ve done and to move in new directions that will avoid future occurrences. Often times the kids will unknowingly let you know how you’re doing. One of the best ways to find out is to listen to how the kids interact with one another. After hundreds of hours together they tend to sound a lot like you.

We have a neighbor who yells quite often at his kids and not so surprisingly we see his children yelling at one another. Their ears turn crimson red, they step up uncomfortably close, and spike an index finger into the other’s face as they raise a loud and angry voice. They sound exactly like their father. Seeing this makes you worry what your own kids might do or say. Certainly nothing like this!

Sometimes this mimicking is just the opposite, though. It reminds you that you’re doing something right. Something good. I had a really great conversation with one of my kids at school yesterday. One of those conversations that let you get a glimpse of something you’ve done right.

I decided at the beginning of writing workshop yesterday that I should really settle in and try to publish a piece to share alongside the kids. I knew that time was short and that I had a lot of graduate work to do at home so whatever this piece was going to be it would need to be relatively short. I decided on a poem.

I am not one to normally write a poem. Sure, I do my best each year to spend a few weeks really focusing on poetry and its many forms and uses of playful and powerful language. However, I find that once this poetry unit washes away I no longer feel like writing a poem of my own. Read them, sure. Write them, no.

So I sat down at a table next to Kayla, who was also struggling to decide what to write, and opened up my writer’s notebook to a page where, a few days earlier, I had taken some notes on many of the sensory observations to be had when watching fireworks. There’s a poem in here somewhere, I thought. I dropped my head onto my notebook and exhaled loudly. This got Kayla’s attention.

“What are you doing?” she asked, more entertained than concerned.

“Writing a poem,” I answered. I lifted my head to look at her. “Hey, you want to write one, too?”

I showed her how I had assembled and organized my notes on the fireworks. She decided to do the same thing for Captain D’s, the seafood restaurant. We worked alongside one another, doing serious work on poems that would no doubt change the course of humankind. After about ten minutes I had what I thought was a pretty good start but my poem seemed to be getting longer and longer without any end in sight. I couldn’t for the life of me figure out where this poem was headed, none-the-less why I really even chose to write it.

I picked up my notebook and walked over to Kirby.

“Hey Kirby, you think you could sit with me and help me with my poem a little bit?” I asked.

She looked up at me.

“Sure.”

I made my way over to the front of the room to have a seat on the carpet and wait for her. Kirby finished up what she was doing and came over looking a tad bit honored and a tad bit unsure.

“Okay,” I started. “Here’s what I’ve done. I started with these words and phrases that remind me of watching a really big fireworks display and I’ve tried to make them into a poem. The problem is that I’m really not sure how to end it. I’m not sure where it’s headed and I don’t want it to just stop awkwardly. You know what I mean?”

“Yeah,” she answered.

“Well, let me read to you what I have so far and you maybe you can help me think of a good way to end it,” I said.

I read her my poem. It was really fresh and really raw so there were parts where I wasn’t even sure how it was supposed to sound and other parts where I struggled to read my own careless handwriting. Once I had finished I looked up at her and asked, “So, what do you think? How could I end it?”

She sat and thought for a while looking really unsure.

“I don’t know,” she said. “I haven’t written any poems in a really long time. Maybe you could find a poetry book and read through it to get some ideas. You could see how other people have finished theirs.”

That was it! What do we do when we get stuck in our writing? We find a piece of writing that we really like and we think about what they have done that we could emulate. She was actually using my own advice to help me with my piece. She was the teacher and I was the learner. Moments like this seem really small and inconsequential to most anyone who doesn’t teach but to those of us who do it’s the stuff that could make an entire day.

“Do you know of any poetry books in particular that I might try?” I asked. I knew this was pushing it a little because Kirby is an avid fantasy reader, consuming every series she can get her hands on.

“No, not really,” she said. “But I did see someone in the room reading a poetry book a few days ago. Maybe you could ask them.”

“Oh, that was Hannah,” I said. “And I think her poetry book was humorous. My poem isn’t really funny so I’m not sure that her book would be all that helpful.”

We sat there and talked about poetry books for a while and then discussed the possibility of finishing with a flourish.

“The finale!” she exclaimed.

“Yeah, the finale,” I said. “That makes a lot of sense. It’s kind of like the natural way to end it.”

She hopped up and returned to her own work and I sat and finished up the draft of my poem. The poem turned out okay but the conversation around it was far better. I couldn’t wait to share this discussion with everyone else. I couldn’t wait to tell them how I had come to Kirby with a very specific question or concern about my piece and how she had suggested finding a book to help and then brainstormed some ideas with me.

After our workshop was over everyone took a turn sharing something they were working on. As always, I was blown away by their originality and their writing. Kayla’s poem about Captain D’s was really great – far better than the restaurant itself, I’m sure. And having learned nothing from that earlier anecdote from a fellow teacher, I shared my piece last. So they could hear the BEST writing.

Okay, definitely not the best. But thanks to Kayla writing alongside me and Kirby giving me some pointers I was able to finish a poem. Quite an accomplishment.

Fireworks

The crowd gathers in so tight
I can barely breathe
Our heads lifted
skyward
in anticipation

Suddenly the first crackles
fill the sky with shimmering
sparkling greens
and blues
and reds
and purples
and whites

Where do all the colors come from?

My chest pounds
with each explosion of light
each tremor of sound
Babies bury their faces
in their mothers’ chests
crying
crying
crying
Wanting it to stop

Seconds turn to minutes
slowly ticking past
and the sky goes still
Clouds of smoke
Sit above us
like an eerie dream
Calm

Suddenly thousands
of flashes spark from
the ground
and sticks of lightning
again fill the air
It’s too much to see
Too much to hear

I wish I could stretch it out
over a million nights
so it would
never
have
to
end

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Parenthood: The Book

From the moment the baby arrived,
it was obvious that he was the boss.
He  put Mom and Dad on a round-the-clock schedule,
with no time off.
And then he set up his office right smack-dab
in the middle of the house.
He made demands.
Many,many demands.
And he was quite particular.
If things
weren't done
to his immediate
satisfaction, 
he had a fit.

So starts The Boss Baby, one of the newest picture books in our classroom. When I first read this book, chuckling to myself after every page, my immediate thought was "Who do I know that's having a baby?" It seemed like the perfect gift.

Of course someone without children probably couldn't fully relate.

He conducted meetings.
Lots and lots of meetings,
many in the middle of the night.

This story is probably much more humorous a few months into parenthood. In fact, maybe it's better suited for a first birthday. In addition to a nice bedtime story it would provide parents with an opportunity to look back and laugh at all they have survived - so far.

There are many books written to help parents do just that. Survive. Tricia and I read a couple. The first was What to Expect When You're Expecting, followed by What to Expect the 1st Year then ...the 2nd year and so on. This series is like the Dr. Spock's Baby and Childcare for this generation. We read the first book on pregnancy. Or, more accurately, Tricia read it and I browsed. It explained what was happening with the development of the baby in each month of pregnancy. It was fun to follow along and know that whatever was lurking in Tricia's stomach now had fingernails. Fingernails!

"It could start clawing it's way out of there at any moment, Tricia."

We also read the second book on the first year with the baby. We were a bit concerned that we didn't really know anything about babies and how to keep them alive. Later we found that keeping them alive was really easy. It was getting them to sleep that was the impossible part. With Harper we just kept picking her up and rocking her. Each time we would lay her down for a nap we'd gently, and ever-so-slowly, set her into her crib and then embark on the five minute scoot across the floor toward the door, trying our best not to step on a squeaky floorboard or to let the door squeak as we walked out. Many times it didn't work out and she awoke again, screaming her head off.

Harper didn't sleep at night either. We'd have to go get her and rock her to sleep on a fairly regular basis. Tricia probably did this more than I did. I hate to fit into a gender stereotype but I was pretty good at staying asleep - or at least pretending to. By the time Ainsley came along I decided we couldn't do the sleepless nights again. We needed help.

We went to the bookstore and picked up a copy to Dr. Ferber's much controversial book Solve Your Child's Sleep Problems. I desperately wanted to know how to teach a baby to sleep through the night. Unfortunately I found that I had to read - or at least skim- four or five whole chapters before I got to the good part. The first hundred pages or so was dedicated to helping us understand babies and their behaviors. This one time in my life I didn't want to understand. I just wanted to be told what to do. In specific terms.

I finally found the right chapter and learned why the book is so controversial. Dr. Ferber teaches that the best way to get a baby to sleep through the night is essentially to allow them to cry it out. The first night you wait maybe ten minutes after they start crying to come in, rub their back (never picking them up), speak softly to them, and walk out again. Each time they cry you wait ten minutes before coming in. The next night it's fifteen minutes, and so on. The idea is that you're reassuring them that you are still there but teaching them to ultimately put themselves back to sleep. We do this as adults. We actually wake up, at least partially, throughout the night and put ourselves back to sleep without even noticing it. Babies can do it too.

It took Harper a year-and-a-half to sleep through the night. After reading Dr. Ferber's book and putting it into practice (you had to wait until the baby was at least six months old or so to do this) Ainsly was "cured" within two nights. I suddenly became a big believer in Dr. Ferber and recommended it to every droopy-eyed parent I knew or met at the playground.

As the kids grow older I find we don't really ever seek out these types of books anymore. We've learned to trust ourselves and to watch and listen to others we respect and admire. And, of course, much of what we do as parents was modeled for us by our own parents who succeeded in not raising us to be pychopaths or even Republicans (a little joke for Tricia's dad).

I did, however, recently come upon a book on raising older children that I really love. Of all places, it was already on our bookshelf. Titled Raising Children: A Guide to Raising Children, by Children, it was written for me nine years ago by my fifth grade students at New City School. After Harper was born I took a six week paternity leave. When I returned my students had created, on their own, a book to teach me all I needed to know about being a parent.

It is organized into various sections:

The Rules About Kids
You don't have to tell us we look like rag muffins when we go to school.
We will shut up as long as we are eating.
We will always love you. 
We are only kids. 

School Days
Always pick a school where both you and your child feel welcome.

The Top 10 Things That Kids Hate That Parents Do
Hanging up underwear when we have friends over.
Think that the ugly clothes that are cheaper look "exactly" the same as the brand name ones.
Show naked baby pictures. 


Interests
Your kid has his or her own interests. They may not be the same as yours but support them fully. Encourage your kids to do fun after school activities...That will give them a chance to do more of what they love.
Also try to share your kids interests. Maybe they could teach you a thing or two. 
Always remember that they will explore new things and may like something for a while and then stop liking it. But don't ever force your child to do something that they don't feel comfortable with. Have fun!


Top Five Things that Kids Like Their Parents to Do
5. Let us see PG-13 movies when we are at least 10 years old.
4. Let us get our ears pierced whenever we want.
3. When we don't get such a good grade encourage us instead of ripping our heads off.
2. Buy us things.

and the most important...

1. Love us. 

Now that's sound advice.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Toughing Out the Cold

 Sun rising over the middle school football field outside our classroom window.
(as captured by Maxwell)

Last Wednesday, as we walked in to school from the van, Ainsley looked up and said "Wow, look at the clouds!" I had noticed them too on the drive in. They were tightly grouped together in small mounds across the sky, looking very much like the moguls you see skiers hopping over in the Winter Olympics. In the distance we could see the sun just beginning to rise above the treeline. 

About an hour later my students had made their way into our classroom and were spread about the room playing chess, reading books, and searching the internet for news articles to share. I was working to decorate a CD cover with a small group of kids when Maxwell came over.

"Mr. Hass, did you see the sky?" he asked.

"Yeah, it's beautiful," I responded.

"Could I get the camera and climb out the window to take a  picture of it?" he asked.

I really wish our classroom had a door because we do quite a lot of climbing in and out of that window. While I've never been told specifically NOT to let the kids crawl out of it, I can't imagine it's encouraged.

"Sure," I said. 

I didn't really expect the photo to turn out. I imagined, if anything, it would be washed out by the sunlight. However, after school I pulled out the camera to see what pictures the kids had taken over the course of the day and I was amazed by the beauty of that first shot. A professional photographer could not have captured it any better.

Later in the day, after working to write songs and make sense of fractions, we cleaned up for recess. Kayla asked if she could bring the camera out and snap some shots of the kids playing and of the ice that sometimes collected here and there. I gave her the green light, most of us grabbed a jacket, and we headed out.

It was cold. There was a day when I would differentiate between "cold" and "South Carolina cold." In St. Louis we had long, long stretches where the high temperature would stay below twenty degrees. It was not uncommon to see the mercury drop below 0 a few times over the course of a winter. So when we moved to South Carolina and saw people bundling up as soon as the temperatures dropped into the low fifties we couldn't help but laugh.

They just seemed to overreact to the slightest change in temperature. At the threat of  snow flurries there would be rumors that school might be canceled. In fact, there were times in those first few years here where school was canceled due to the threat of flurries. Oh, and morning temperatures in the twenties.

In St. Louis I remember taking my class out to recess everyday unless it was raining or the temperatures were sub-zero. Part of this was due to my great hatred of indoor recess. But another reason for going out every day was that as long as you dressed appropriately you were never really all that miserable. Especially when you ran around and played rather than standing in one place to shiver and gripe. 

I had the right clothes, too. I loaded up with a wool vest, cotton coat, and windbreaker jacket. Added to that was a neck gator, stocking hat, and really big mittens outfitted with a wind and moisture blocking sleeve. Throw in a second pair of socks and leather hiking boots and I was sweating bullets until I finally hit the door.

I've noticed, though, that I'm not so careful to dress appropriately now that I live in the south. I still wear shorts a day or two each week and sometimes only come out to recess equipped with a hoodie jacket.  There's ice on the ground and in the pond - a fact that just amazes my students - and it's cold.                                                        
I shake. And shiver. And put my hands in my pocket and gripe to myself.

Why is it soooo cold?
It was seventy degrees like a week and a half ago!
Seriously, I didn't move south to freeze to death. This is ridiculous!

I have a partner in all this. Another teacher who is out to recess with us each day is originally from Texas. He pulls his hood around his face so tight that you can barely see any skin in there at all. He shifts from one foot to the other moaning and complaining. I tell him of the old days when I would have not worn a jacket at all. And the time I braved a port-a-potty toilet seat in 8-degree weather. And the time I ran a half-marathon in a 4-degree snow storm!

But those are all memories now. I no longer laugh at the locals because I've become one of them. Now the new northern transplants can enjoy a good laugh at me. I'm alright with that. 

I know their day will come soon enough.