Saturday, June 11, 2011

You don't know me!

Do you ever look around at your life and wonder if you can truly handle what is in front of you?

Often times I find myself in this situation when in the classroom. I look around at all the young faces in front of me and wonder if I can really take on the task of educating them. It is a tremendous task. I am taking on so much beyond teaching. Just a few months ago, I wrote this as my status on Facebook:

Today I taught language arts, made 150 copies, gave out five Band-Aids, consoled three girls while they cried, hand-sharpened 36 CRCT pencils (and got a nasty blister from it), danced with students at lunch AND on the baseball field, played soccer in the hallway, and hugged approximately 80 seventh graders. Just another day in the life of a middle school teacher.”

Teaching is a busy life.

But I like it that way.

Two weeks ago, when I had officially accepted my position, I came bouncing into camp the next morning and announced my new job status to my eagerly-awaiting camp children. Immediately I heard such comments as, "Eighth grade? Really, Ms. Georgia Michelle? They're going to eat you alive! You're way too nice for eighth grade! Are you serious?" Indeed, I was serious. I was very happy with my choice. Before I could open my mouth, one of my campers, who just happened to have been one of my in-classroom students during a teaching placement my junior year, blurted out, "She will be just fine. Don't worry 'bout her! Y'all know Ms. Michelle not Ms. Herring. MS. HERRING will deal with eighth grade just fine. She can handle it!"

As funny as this little anecdote is, it raises a very important point. I am a different kind of person at camp versus at school, and this young man was wise enough to recognize that.

A good teacher teaches in the classroom while a great teacher teaches AND learns. I often say I learn so much more from the students with which I interact than they will ever learn from me. They teach me patience and understanding. They teach me important new words that a teacher of young adolescents needs to know. They teach me new dances, like the Wobble and the Cat Daddee, so I can continue to keep my lessons rigorous AND relevant.

They teach me that I can love hundreds of people unconditionally and with all my heart, and I certainly plan on doing so for as long as possible!

1 comment:

  1. o my! if anyone can, YOU will find time to blog in your busy, and busier life! impressions of your time now will be just like a "dear diary" later on...
    i used to keep "real" journals, but i cant quite manage the writing as frequently as
    i used to...it's art and poetry right now!
    but i have kept a poetry blog ongoing @ live journal for a couple years now..
    (if you'd like link, i'll send it)
    honestly, it's just that my facebook keeps
    me sooo busy LOL.

    very nice work here!
    love, ma

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