Lessons Learned…
The Beaded Necklace
I
was hired to fill a long-term substitute teaching position in a fourth grade
classroom just months after my December college graduation. Young, eager, optimistic, all appropriate and
helpful attributes for a new incoming sub, nicely complimented my satchel
stuffed with freshly acquired scholarly educational theories, philosophies, and
cutting edge fail-safe strategies designed and promised to reach all and teach
all. With squared-shoulder confidence and change-the-world spirit, I entered
that classroom and encountered reality. Reality always somehow seems to smack
of a bit of disappointment. People can
frequently behave so disappointingly human regardless of their ages. Human
nature depicts endless layers of self and emanating from this myopic vantage
point can be a fairly insidious disregard for others. Somewhere between taking lunch count that
first day and starting our new novel, the leaning-toward-the-toxic classroom cliques
magically appeared with great clarity and unapologetically. This group. That
group. The power group. The Loner. Just one loner. She steered clear of the fray, kept her eyes
down, and tried to fly under the radar. They “let” her do so to a certain
extent, that is to say, after “they” snipped and cut enough to make sure she
knew that her radar flying was by their permission. Power. The lust for power
starts young, but where exactly does it originate? I sincerely want to know
that. It’s poison, of that I am certain.
To the oblivious or insecure teacher, it will run rampant and dominate your
classroom in extremely covert, though devastating ways. It is the root of
bullying. And bullying is at the root of a pain that can be so excruciating, so
consuming, so silent that it completely debilitates in its rendering of powerlessness.
Who bestows this power? Who perpetuates it? Do we all? I was just a young
long-term sub walking into a classroom with its established and accepted
climate, but my eyes, as those of one who understood the wrath of a bully,
remained fixed upon the loner. I would
help her in quiet, unassuming ways. An encouraging word in passing. An affirming smile. A “random” opportunity to teacher-assist on
an errand to the office. An extra
superlative word written on a corrected assignment. Continual, covert building
up day after day after day after day. The bullies, the exclusive cliques, the power
seekers were not given voice other than to participate according to my directions.
We were one class. We would learn to care for each other and recognize that
each one brings gifts and stories that are unique and worthy of being
celebrated. Not one more than another, but each one. On my last day with the fourth graders, the
loner who no longer was one brought me a gift that she, her mother, and
grandmother had made. It was a
stunningly beautiful beaded necklace strung in the Native American tradition of
their family and their tribe. She simply said, “Thank you for noticing me.” Her simple message did more to inform my
teaching than all of the stuffing in my satchel.
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