Saturday, October 23, 2010

A Student's Dream, A Teacher's Nightmare

It is Field Day to celebrate Homecoming. A few days before the events in this picture, an upperclassman student came in to ask if I would volunteer at the Pie Throwing booth. With some pressure from my students, cheering "Do it. Do it." I told the student that I would. Well, as you can see, volunteering for the booth meant allowing students to throw whip cream pies at us (I did know this was the point when I volunteered). Bonnie, the freshmen science teacher, is the most covered on the left. In the middle is Ashley, my department head and friend, and then there's me on the right. Thankfully, my face did not get creamed, but you can see that some of my students did successfully hit me. The pieing didn't last for long because students started pieing each other and the vice principal (who is unpictured next to me) shut the booth down. The Field Day was three hours of booths and free time out on the football field with all students. After the booth was shut down, a pick up game of soccer between some teachers (including me) and some students commenced. We lost horribly, I accidentally kicked one of my best students, but in the end we had a lot of fun. It was the most beautiful day!

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Never Never Land

Of course at the end of each day, my roommates and I all find ourselves sitting on the couch/floor/chair and literally surrounded by work in the form of mounds of paper. The daily conversation starts out as an innocent, "How was your day?" but the answer always consists of hilarious stories, heartbreaking disappointments, an exclamation about how silly or crazy teenagers can be, or a list of frustrations. Trust me, each of us can add something to this list of discussion points. However, one point has become a trend. My roommate Ashley, after a round of sharing stories, often labels my situation as equivalent to teaching in Never Never Land.

The simple translation of this is that I feel like I have power and support in my situation. As most of the comments from the previous blog noted, I can and do make my students do push ups as punishment. Trust me, if you remember any part of being a freshmen, you probably remember the aching desire to fit in or to blend in. Being required to drop and give your Algebra teacher 10 push ups in front of the class is not the ideal way to achieve either of these goals. I always issue a verbal warning before a student is asked to do push ups so that they know if they make another disruptive or disrespectful choice they will do push ups. Especially for the girls, the threat alone is enough. However, these freshmen keep testing the water.

I think the only way to show this, is the case of my fourth period class. In a block schedule, fourth period is the last period of the day on Mondays and Wednesdays. By the last period, these kids are more than ready to be out of school and are definitely not putting up with Algebra. One particular day, the class as a whole was so unruly that they were given a class-wide verbal warning. After giving several directions for the students to work independently and silently on the assignment, I told the class that the next time one of their classmates chooses to talk, the entire class will owe me 10 push ups. Sure enough, not 2 minutes go by and a few students begin to talk. "Drop and give me 10." While half of the class immediately responds, the other half mutter and slowly move to take position. My response, "You have 10 seconds to get in position or the class will do 5 extra push ups." I proceeded to countdown from 10. Of course there was one defiant girl making a show of her rebellion and she earned the class 15 push ups total. They returned to their seats and were told that they would get 10 more if they could not work silently.... This time they made it about 4 minutes before talking began. "Drop and give me 10." While plenty of students muttered, every student got in position and did their 10 this time.

I have yet to enforce class-wide push ups since that day, and little by little I have seen individual students began to take responsibility for their classmates around them. Students are learning that not only do they have the responsibility to behave themselves, but they also have the power to influence those around them in a positive way. At the end of this week, I would say that I have at least 2 or 3 of these exceptionally responsible students in each class, but my goal is that by Christmas, the majority of my students have this attitude towards our class time.

They will either learn to work within the rules or they will gain some serious upper body strength. I say it's a win, win either way.