I often wonder (certainly daily, sometimes hourly) if there
is something wrong with me. I see other teachers coasting into their orderly
classrooms a few minutes before 8 am each morning, and scooting out the door
just after 4. I read facebook posts about their tv shows and hobbies and
weekends away. I observe colleagues volunteering to run committees, delivering
home baked cookies to the teacher’s lounge, hanging out in the office having
casual conversations about the news
and their daily lives. From my perspective just about everyone else has figured
out how to make teaching a sustainable career capable of achieving equilibrium.
I have not. My days go like this:
After waking up my kids, making lunches, getting everyone
dressed and in the car and dropped off at school, I drive through traffic and
park so I can jog to school where I squeak in the door at 8:00, 7:45 if I am
lucky, and then I print up my schedule, copy any worksheets for the day, check
for any last minute email changes, after which I take the stairs two at a time
to my classroom, unstack the chairs, write the Morning Message on the white
board, pick up and sharpen pencils and wipe down tables, try to bring order to
my desk which is usually covered with a collection of completed work, notes
from parents, confiscated items and randomly acquired markers, just in time for
the students to arrive at 8:15 whom ideally I meet at the door where I check in
on behavior goals for the day, ask if they have gotten enough sleep and eaten
breakfast, try to make a positive touch point before a long day of
disciplining, remind them to turn in homework and sharpen two pencils, until
finally it is 8:30 and we all gather for Morning Meeting on the rug where I
collect their first math problems of the day, take attendance, lead them in a
greeting, a share, a game, a time to set our intentions for the day, until 9 am
when it is time to transition to Literacy and I read a short piece of text and
model my thinking on chart paper, and dismiss them to a “menu” of independent
activities, making sure the list is not too long to be overwhelming and not too
short to leave them any time to fool around, making sure each child has reading
material that is both accessible and challenging, so I can pull small groups,
sometimes one or two at a time working on decoding (sounding out)
multi-syllable words, sometimes in groups as large as six who are reading
novels like A Wrinkle in Time and
working on determining character motivation, trying to stay focused on the
needs of each group and relying on my assistant teacher to manage the kids who
want to chat, who refuse to read, who are taking scissors and systematically
removing all of the erasers off of all of the pencils, but still there is the
inevitable student who needs to talk to me, to ask about an assignment, a concern,
a question that only I can answer, so I remind them that I am not to be
interrupted, and remind the assistant to address their concerns, until it is
time for snack, at which point we must feed all of the children lest they start
arguing and crying before lunch time, and remember that Nate needs his rest to
mitigate his physical disability, and remember that Jane needs all materials
loaded onto her iPad to mitigate her visual impairment, and remember that Darcy
and William need their sensory break to mitigate their inattention, and Cory
and Tom need a movement break to mitigate their hyperactivity, after which
there are demands of water, requests for the rest room, messes to be dealt
with, before it is time for them to line up and leave the room for the blessed
“Special,” music, art, drama, PE, Spanish, when once a day they leave and I am
awarded 45 minutes to get something done, which is the point when I must start
running again, to the copier, to the meeting, to make the chart for the lesson,
to check-out the computers for math practice, to set up the materials for the
demonstration, before it is time for them to return and start math, when they
break into groups according to what they know and what they need to learn,
rotating between independent work which is catered to their individual needs,
and fact practice on the computers which has been selected for the skill, and
instruction with me or another teacher on the rug or at the back table where we
pose problems, share solutions, walk through strategies, trying to ensure that
each child feels both challenged and successful, before it is time for lunch
which must be distributed, monitored, mediated, after which there are crumbs to
be swept, spills to be absorbed, trash to be removed, before spelling when
there are 500 pieces of paper with spelling words sorted onto desks and pasted
into books, or writing which is the best time of day, because there is silence
and because they are pouring their souls into their journals, and the worst
time because so many hate to think about their own lives, followed by recess
when I must check-in the homework from last night and hand out the homework for
tonight and prepare for the last lesson of the day, until finally Expedition
with its small groups and deep questions and problem based learning when the
children are the least focused and most tired and more likely to drag their
feet, refuse to work, become distracted, engage in conflicts, but we implore
them to give us one last hour until it is finally, thankfully 3:00, when
homework must be written down and tucked into folders, when chairs must be
stacked and pencils picked up and stray markers put into supply bins (or tossed
onto my desk), when parents must be greeted and small details discussed, like
who misbehaved, or who didn’t have a lunch, or who needs to review X or Y or Z
before the quiz next Monday, until finally, thankfully they leave, one by one, and
there is quiet, and I can use the bathroom, and there is a moment to sit and
sip my tea which has been waiting in its thermos before I turn to the work to
be graded, the lessons to be planned, the emails to be written about the
meeting that needs to be held about the child who is not progressing as we
would expect given the circumstances or the field study that we would like to
hold next month or the pencils that need to be ordered, all before it is time
to race out the door at 5 pm, not to an exercise class but to pick up my
children and shepherd them home for dinner and homework and books and songs and
a kiss and bed, when I might take a moment to ask my husband about his day
before turning once again to the tests to be graded, the essays to be read, the
emails to be sent, until I can’t keep my eyes open and I let myself fall
asleep, because in a few hours I will wake up and begin again.
So I don’t write.
There is a rhythm and reason to this apparent cacophony. The
days have a level of predictability. After ten years in the classroom I have
systems that run themselves, and many responsibilities are assumed by my
assistant, without whom I could not survive. But this is the first year that I have begun
to feel that “I am too old for this.” I
need to find a way to lubricate the weeks so that I move through them without
so much friction. So that there is energy left at the end of the day for myself
and my family.
So I can write.
So I can write.
Just reading this is exhausting! I think your job, more than many, requires you to be 'on' the entire time, and of course that has to take its toll. Hang in there!
ReplyDeleteDea Jes,
ReplyDeleteI have time to read and admire and remember. I'm glad you have the self-respect and self-knowledge not to write when you can't and to write when you can. Looking forward SO MUCH to seeing you and your family in January!
Lots of love and thanks.
Kathie