Showing posts with label Teacher. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teacher. Show all posts

Monday, March 14, 2016

Struggling to Blog

This past school year I have had the privilege to teach 8th grade reading and writing - English Language Arts.  But I not only changed grade levels, moving from 3rd to 8th, I also changed school districts.

Teaching 8th grade has been one of the biggest challenges I have faced, and I know I am the better for it.  There have been some rough days where I wondered, 
“Am I really going to make it through this?”  
How many days until June?” 
But when I look at the calendar, I see the reflection of how much stronger, how much wiser, how much more patient I am.  I see the progress of how far I’ve come. How many mornings I’ve woken up with the anxiety of what the day would bring, what kind of shenanigans would happen, and even worse - the success I could have. 

The last few months of teaching 8th grade and the lack of finding resources has led me to think that I need to come back to my blog.  I had abandoned it because I wasn’t passionate about it.  I started a blog for all the wrong reasons: 
  • because it seemed like what I was supposed to do.  
  • because other teachers had blogs, other teachers made connections, other teachers were so happy – it seemed – with roses and rainbows and pots of gold and little leprechauns dancing around the screen.  
That’s what my eyes and my mind were seeing.  I felt like I wasn’t living up to that.  I was tired.  I was tired of not being surrounded by the teachers I was reading about on computer screens.  If teachers were blogging, then surely I just needed to find a new school where I would certainly find teachers who wanted to blog and create and try new things in their classrooms. Right? Of course those teachers were out there, they just weren’t in the one school that I was in. . . 

So I got tired.  I had mentally exhausted myself.  I didn’t love my blog. I was jealous of what others had.  I wanted it for myself but it wasn’t being handed to me, as if I deserved it on a silver platter brought to me by Shemar Moore (Derek Morgan on Criminal Minds) [insert emoji heart eyes face] ;)  I even paid for a blog design thinking that would inspire me to blog more.  

[Anybody familiar with Psalm 23:5? “Thou prepares a table before me in the presence of mine enemies” ? … yea, I’m my own worst enemy.]

Even after spending all that money, I haven’t blogged much.

Then I began researching how it was going for others in middle school.  I was having such a hard time adjusting that I felt like I was doing something wrong.  But I wasn’t coming up with what I wanted.  I wasn’t finding the support I thought I was looking for.  Eventually, after a few weeks of searching, I had an epiphany – there isn’t much from middle school teachers because it just doesn’t exist.  Here I am, looking for support for middle school when I needed to step up and voice what I could on the subject.  If there’s something I’ve learned from taking Lucy’s (Calkins) classes, it’s this: 
you have something worth sharing with the teaching community.  
I need to be writing.  And so, today, my imaginary goal/wish list that exists in the confines of my brain needs to be relayed to one of the flair pens chillin’ in my agenda and become a reality.  I’ve been mentally telling myself that I should aim to blog once a week; that’s manageable.  Yet, it wasn’t happening.  I wasn’t making it a priority.  There were times when I had the mental fortitude and motivation to blog, yet actually sitting down, typing, and actually – hold on, I might choke – publish such thinking, such words, might kill me.  Or so I thought.


Which has brought me to this post.  This post is a start of a reflection on all the things I think about during Lucy’s fieldwork class.  How inspired I am to write and actually think through my thoughts, organize them to be ready to share my knowledge with the greater education community.  I have something worth sharing.   Doesn’t matter if anyone listens.  It will fall on the ears of those who need to read it.  I need to be faithful, though, to what I want.  [Side note: now accepting any and all applicants for keeping me accountable.  Being my fairy blogmother.]

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

I Teach Because ...


Just like majority of teachers, I don't do what I do for the recognition.  We do it - we show up to our classrooms every day, we stay late after school differentiating and planning small groups, we get to the bottom of incidents that happened at lunch - because we have ten months to make a positive impact in a child's life.  That equates to approximately 900 hours in the classroom.  All to let a little soul know - they are cared for and they are loved and someone is investing time in them because they. are. the. future.   

Next month, March 3rd to be exact, will make one full complete year of me being a teacher.  And this past week I had one of the most honoring and humbling experiences I could ever imagine.  My vice-principal approached me last Tuesday night, at 5:00 pm when we were beginning report card night.  She sat down at my team teacher's blue kidney table, complimented how nice I looked, then pulled out a magazine with a lined post it on the cover and a big smile on her face.  I thought, "Okay, she wants me to write an article for this magazine."

No.

It was something much bigger.

She said, "So every month a teacher is featured in this magazine and they want to feature you next month!  You'll be on the cover!  So call this man, at this number, and set it up!"

..............

My jaw dropped.  All that went through my head was, "I don't deserve this.  I don't deserve this. There are so much other teachers who are exceptional!"  I couldn't believe my VP thought so highly of me.  I'm tucked away in a little room in a random hallway just teaching my students how to be leaders, bucket fillers, analyzers, role models, writers, readers, authors, creators, gentlemen, ladies, polite, chivalrous, you know - the usual.  But this .. honor ... has really made me dig deep and think hard.

I have reflected on this for the past weekend, especially since the magazine asked me to fill out a questionnaire.  I was forced to really think about why I do what I do.  It took me about 3 days to answer all of the questions.  I would get really distracted, shut down to answering them, over think them, and just question myself - "is that answer 'good enough'?"  And then I remember - "good enough" in who's book?  I doubt myself a lot because I'm "inexperienced", "new", "young", whatever I want to label myself as.  But I look around at all the other teachers I work with, my colleagues, and I realize it could be any one of us - we all deserve to be "featured".  We are all exceptional, and if we did what we do for the recognition - then we're in it for the wrong reasons.

Nonetheless, today, through the messy morning commute and through the 30983091 inches of snow we already have here in the north east, the magazine made their way to my classroom.  Out of 27 students, I had 15!  Anyways, the man in charge and his photographer were there for I guess almost 45 minutes - taking pictures and asking about my classroom.  It was truly an experience that I will savor.  It was humbling yet inspiring.    

Sometimes I wonder if I'll "burn out" from what I do, but I like the business of it!  Maybe it's because I'm young, I have time, blah blah blah ... but what I do is a gift that God has given me.  I may work my gluteus fabulous off way too hard, but is that even possible when investing in the life of the child?  Working too hard?  It's a lifetime investment.  It's not an IRA, the stock market, or the slot machines.  It's the brain, the heart, the soul, the life of a little one.  These little ones are some one's niece, nephew, best friend, granddaughter, cousin, daughter, son, grandson.  These little ones are the future of tomorrow.


Why do you teach?