Thursday, February 26, 2015

Long in the Tooth and a Little Thin on Top

It was not the first time during my half decade progression from non-traditional college freshman to nearly-fully-trained student teacher that I was grateful for my age. Many times as a college student, I have muttered under my breath with regrets that I did not start college sooner. Frequently I have groaned as the load of diligent student interfered with my duties as a devoted husband and attentive father. My age has occasionally been a benefit however, and this day it was definitely a benefit. Today I was glad to be (and look) old.

Today I had the pleasure of meeting with an upset parent. This parent had told my Cooperating Teacher that she was not going to have “some student teacher picking on her daughter” and that she would “be right there to straighten this out.’’ I was terrified. My CT smiled and tried to offer calming anecdotes. This is part of the job. These things happen. She only has her daughter’s side of the story. You have been doing an excellent job, Erich. You have nothing to worry about. Appreciative as I was for her efforts, I was still terrified. The student in question (let’s call her Sara) had been a challenge since the first day of the school year. She has a big personality, a booming voice, the respect of her classmates, and perhaps the biggest brain in the 6th grade. She has strong convictions and she is as stubborn as a… non-traditional student teacher with a job to do.

Sara has challenged me on my teaching strategies, the relevance or accuracy of content material, and on a personal level as a man dealing with a 12 year old young woman. On some occasions, her ferocity has been a tremendous ally, an agent of educational progress in the classroom. More often however, it has been a storm cloud on my picnic. Recently, her challenges have grown more frequent and more personal in nature. She’s smart and quick-witted, but lacks the self-control to use either trait to her advantage, yet. She may someday rule the world, but I will not let her rule my student teaching classroom.  Earlier this week I resorted to rotating her to the next classroom for the sake of getting through the day’s lesson. She responded in loud defiance and stormed her way directly to the office in spite in spite of the punishment she knew would ensue. After filing my first ever disciplinary report (I felt sick as I wrote my summary of the events) Sara was put in ISS the following day. Twas a Thursday she spent brooding In-School Suspension…  As she passed me in the hall after school I said to her “Tomorrow’s a new day, Sara.”

Friday WAS a new day in my mind. My age and mileage has taught me to make efforts to view life in that way. Sara had other ideas as class began. Again she made her opinions known about seemingly every aspect of the lesson, the environment, and the world. I had planned for the students to spend the class period writing the final copies of their district mandates essays. I have had success with YouTube-ing “epic video game music” and running a slide show of social studies relevant images to accompany the epic music. Her complaints drowned out the symphonic tones and worse yet, distracted her peers. I paused the music and asked everyone to stand up for a brain break. I stood on a table and the students followed my example as I stretched my back, legs, arms, and (wait for it) hands.

It was the hand stretching that set Sara off again. “My finger hurts” she said. “I don’t care.” I responded. The pin was pulled from her internal grenade and I didn’t even know. A teacher HAS to say “I don’t care” at least twenty times a week in a 6th grade classroom. We finished stretching and students got back to writing, Sara was even quiet. I closed class a few moments early (I like to take a few minutes to ask what exciting weekend plans everyone has) and the students lined up near the door.  Sara opposed to everything everyone said until I suggested that she keep her opinions to herself for another 30 seconds until class is over. “Whatever, weirdo” she said. Her classmates laughed. The CT flew into action. “That’s it! That’s enough. You’re being disrespectful and I’m calling your mother.” Before I knew it, the bell rang, students left, and the CT was approaching me with the phone in her hand. “Mom’s coming up here to talk it out. She’s upset. She says no student teacher is going to push her daughter around.”

An hour later, the principal was asking if my CT and I could come to his office to meet with Sara’s mom. We walked the quiet halls and the CT and principal both offered encouraging words. “It’s been nice knowing you.” He said. No- that was my imagination. “I remember the gist of their combined messages was “This is part of the job you have chosen to pursue. It’s going to happen. This is a good learning opportunity.” I took a deep breath as he opened his office door. Sara glared up at me from her seat beside her mother, who also glared up at me from her seat.

My eyes met the eyes of an angry and protective mother. I watched her size me up. She looked at my inexpensive tennis shoes, my less than cutting edge fashion attire, my clean shaven face (no trendy soul patch or goatee here), my weary wrinkles and my bald head. I felt her assessment of me go from “Wannabe Teacher Jerk-off Hipster Kid” to a guy who has mileage, street smarts, social awareness, and life experiences enough to maybe even manage some wisdom. Most of all, I think that she saw an older guy who genuinely wants to be a positive influence on her daughter’s life.


As the meeting proceeded, Sara’s version of the story melted under scrutiny. Her mother grew frustrated with her daughter’s trivial complaints and reported inability to control her mouth in class. The CT and principal spoke kindly and confidently on my behalf. She warmed as I mentioned some of Sara’s great efforts and successes. Smiles were being shared by all of the adults in the room as the meeting concluded. Sara even managed to show some slight remorse for lying about me. It was a learning experience for me and I hope for her. We still have months to spend together.  

4 comments:

  1. Erich, from the bottom of heart, I truly thank you for sharing your experience. That situation is one that I have been dreading every since I decided to go into teaching. However it sounds that, with all the difficulties, calling the mother was the best thing that could have happened. Hopefully the student will start to respect you more in the classroom. I believe that the way you stood your ground was awesome. I honestly don’t know what I would have done if that had happened to me. It proves that you truly are in the right profession. Also, this situation is a great example of how important it is to be working in a school that provides positive support. It is awesome that both your C.T. and your principal backed you up in this situation. Not everyone is that lucky, and as future teachers, looking for jobs, that is definitely something that we need to keep in mind. Because that ingredient, in our first year teaching or throughout our career, may help us keep our sanity. You’ll have to update us on the student’s progression!

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  2. Wonderful detail. I can see your situation quite clearly. Thanks for making me painfully aware that I am a "Wannabe Teacher Jerk-off Hipster Kid". Honestly, I couldn't agree more with your rationale and dealing with this situation.

    On the slightly off-topic note of aesthetic presentation of oneself, I'm beginning to think that, perhaps, your blue-collar presentation of yourself is something I should work to adapt. It shows you have nothing to lose, in the eyes of a 6th grader. While formal attire may gain you more cred as a college professor, it seems that it may loose you some in 6th grade.

    It seems to me, that 6th graders attack the way one carries themself more than anything. Afterall, this is the stage of life where students are trying to figure out what it means to have an identity. It seems, there is no way for a 6th grader to insult someone who does not promote an outward identity that is easy to attack.

    I tend to dress in the classroom the same way that I've always dressed formally. I think this has been a mistake, and I think I'm a little late to re-brand. Whenever I'm the only teacher in the room, I tend to get a huge range of insults from students. Many students seem certain that I am gay, and many have told me this - in a very negative way. Friday, a student told me to "shave my beard, it looks stupid." While I'm not about to be socially insulted by a 6th grader, this presents a problem. It's a message of insubordination broadcasted to all other students. How do I approach a personal insult? Do I send them to the office? (I've done this, and it seemed to make me look bad.) Do I stoop to their level and spit something right back? This seems petty. Do I ignore it? This somehow seems like the wrong decision too.

    On one hand, I've long presented myself in a certain way. I do have an asthetic social identity, even if I never think of it. But this identity is not relateable in the classroom - and it causes a ton more fuss than it does good. Do I alter the outward appearance of myself, to something that feels awkward to me? Or do I carry on, looking better ways to deal with insubordination. Good work with your classroom discipline. Perhaps I should phone some parents.

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  3. Erich, so much to love about this post, but here are two of my favorites: (1) your story-telling and (2) your ability to see and articulate the good in "Sara" when many teachers might just write her off as being a trouble-maker. Bravo on both fronts. This piece deserves a wider audience ...

    Brian, thanks for carrying this conversation further with your reflection on your own teacher identity. Good stuff. I'm curious if you have visited with your CT about this; while you personally are not bothered by 6th grade insults, you're right that the "message of insubordination" is not a good thing. Plus, would you allow students to insult one another in this way? Probably not. Visit with your CT and get her support. Students should face consequences for insulting each other and adults in the classroom. You and your CT should determine what those consequences might be and then communicate them to students. Parent phone calls are a viable option, although they might come across as "tattling" if that's your only option.

    In my middle school classroom, detentions or time-owed (after school, during lunch, etc) were a common consequence for any form of misbehavior. They gave me time to visit with the student about his/her behavior and what other options they might choose in the future.

    Thanks for this dialogue. I look forward to hearing more from both of you!

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  4. First, Erich, I have to compliment you on how well this is written. Excellent narration with so much appropriate detail. As a non-traditional student myself, I totally understand your situation. Yes, there are advantages to being "long in the tooth."

    On the issue of dealing with parents, I have found an approach that has (nearly) always worked. Let them know you are searching for ways to help little Sara or Billy, and ask them to assist you in effectively educating their son or daughter. When the teacher and the parents work together for the good of the student, wonderful things can happen.

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