Learn Me Gooder (9 page)

Read Learn Me Gooder Online

Authors: John Pearson

BOOK: Learn Me Gooder
7.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

As a reminder and an aid, each desk has a list of accountable talk prompts taped to it to help the kids remember how to begin. These prompts include:
“I got my answer by ____________.”
“To solve this problem, first I _______________, then I ______________.”
“I’d like to add more to what __________ said.”

To be honest, my kids very rarely begin their sentences any of these ways. However, the two prompts that they really DO seem to have latched on to are the ones that begin, “I agree with __________,” and, “I disagree with ______________.”

It was very funny to hear the way in which these prompts came into play this afternoon.

The kids were completing a name graph in their math journals. To construct this bar graph, we had to first create a tally chart that showed the number of letters in people’s first names. I was standing at the center of the class asking the kids to raise their hands if they had 4 letters in their first name, 5 letters in their first name, etc.

When I got to the “10 or more” category, only Thilleenica raised her hand, saying she had 11 letters in her name.

With our tally chart completed, we moved on to the next step, but that’s when DaQuayvius raised his hand and said, “I disagree with Thilleenica, because I counted the letters in her name, and there are only 10 letters in her name.”

Immediately, Thilleenica raised her hand and retorted, “I disagree with DaQuayvius, because I KNOW how to spell my own name, and there are 11 letters in my name.”

Let no one say that my kids aren’t talking accountably! Though my newest little girl, Fo’lina, doesn’t want to talk to me at all. Fo’lina showed up last week, and her mom raved and raved about what a fantastic reader she was. That day, though, before entering my classroom, Fo’lina asked, “Do I have to read in this class?”

Mrs. Bird told me later that she had been asked the exact same question. I was tempted to use some accountable talk of my own – “I disagree with your mother.”

This morning, Mrs. Bird told me that she had asked Fo’lina to bring a book about sharks over to me yesterday, but that Fo’lina had hesitantly replied, “Can someone else go with me?”

When Mrs. Bird asked her why she needed someone to escort her ten feet across the hall, she answered, “I’m scared of Mr. Woodson.”

I considered donning a hockey mask and walking into Mrs. Bird’s room, shouting, “FO’LINA!! WHY ARE YOU AFRAID OF ME? BRING ME THAT BOOK! NOW!!”

But that would be cruel. And while I may be scary to some, I’m really not cruel.

While we were switching classes, Mickey shared some accountable talk of his own with another hilarious insight. As soon as he saw Mrs. Bird, who was wearing a horizontally-striped black and white long-sleeve shirt, he told her, “You look like one of those guys who goes…”

Here he proceeded to stick both hands out and pretend he was pushing on an invisible wall.

Brilliant.
Talk to you later,
Marcel Marshow’n’tell

Date: Friday, October 30, 2009

 

To: Fred Bommerson

 

From: Jack Woodson

 

Subject: A Jack of all grades

 

 

Hey Fred,

 

 

Here’s hoping that the first grader who ran into me at full speed out by the buses today learns to watch where he’s going. And that he recovers from his injuries quickly.

I haven’t really kept in touch with Philby since I left HPU, so I’m sorry I can’t help you out with whatever issues you two are having now. At least not directly. Give him a little space, and hopefully things will blow over. I’d agree that it’s always good to maintain clear communication, but I don’t think my sample Accountable Talk prompts are going to help you much. Especially not if you fill them in like MadLibs.

“To solve this problem, first I shaved Philby bald, then I laughed my butt off” – made ME laugh, but it’s not going to resolve your dispute.

Let’s accountably talk about the blessings of ADHD. I’m speaking, of course, of Big Jack, and the wonderful world of Shangri-La-La he lives in. This is a boy who routinely asks me after tests, “Is a 50 good?” To which I have to routinely bite my tongue and NOT reply, “No, Jack, in fact, it’s so bad that I’m pretty sure it’s going to start raining soon because a 50 usually makes the angels cry.”

The other day, tired of the kids repeatedly asking how old I am, I tried to show them that they could find anyone’s age if they knew the current year and the year of that person’s birth. Since most of my students were born in 2000, I put 2009 and 2000 on the board and asked what we should do with these numbers. Big Jack immediately shouted, “ADD!!”

So, I added 2009 and 2000 and then complimented Big Jack on looking quite well-preserved for someone over 4,000 years old. He just grinned and asked, “Is that good?”

Yesterday, I had to keep him and a couple of others in my room during PE because they did not finish their work during class time. As is so often the case, Big Jack weighed the options of labeling fractions vs. playing rocket ship with his pencils, and the fractions were found wanting.

As a result, we were both in my room when Mrs. Fitzgerald’s voice suddenly boomed in from the PA system. She must not have realized that I had kids in the room, because she didn’t address me as “Mr. Woodson,” but rather used my first name.

When he heard, “Jack, are you there?” coming from on high, Big Jack immediately looked up and responded, “YES!”

He must have thought God was speaking directly to him, rescuing him from having to finish his work.

“Did I do good, God?”

He actually DID do pretty good on today’s test, which was taken from the math textbook. Once again, the final question was a free response, giving the kids a chance to show how poorly they can express themselves in written English. After reading a couple of answers, I decided to make that question an extra credit question.

It read, “A cake has been cut into 40 pieces. Is it reasonable to say that this is enough cake for 32 people?”

If the kids said anything to the extent that yes, it is reasonable because there are more pieces of cake than there are people, I gave them 1 point extra credit. If they expressed their rationale even more clearly, I gave them 2 points.

Big Jack wrote, “No, it does not make sense because the people would get 1 piece only and sometimes I want to eat 2 pieces of cake or 3.”

I gave the lad 2 extra credit points! It wasn’t at all the answer I was looking for, but he did explain his thinking quite clearly, and being a cake lover myself, I couldn’t exactly disagree with him.

I even made it a point to write, “You did good, Jack” on the top of his test. He’ll still come and ask me if he did good, even after getting his test back, but now I’ll at least have something to point to.
Have a great Halloween!
High Jack

Date: Monday, November 2, 2009

 

To: Fred Bommerson

 

From: Jack Woodson

 

Subject: The Nightmare after Halloween

 

 

Hey dude,

 

 

I had no doubt that once I told you a little more about Big Jack, he would begin to remind you just a bit of the person with whom you share a cubicle wall. The ADHD, the proclivity for sweets, the always speaking before ever thinking.

I hope you had a fantastic Halloween. It’s a shame Nancy hasn’t thrown one of her costume parties in a while, but I had a good time answering the door at my house, seeing all the little tykes in their twilight finery. I went all out myself, dressing as Wolverine of the X-Men, only instead of claws, I taped three sharpened pencils to each of my hands.

My house was popular! And in case you were wondering, I was handing out the good stuff, my friend. We’re talking Twix, Nestle Crunch, and Jolly Ranchers! None of this knockoff stuff. Mrs. Bird was telling me last week that she usually goes to the dollar store and comes away with a bunch of cheap imitator brand candy. I’m sure her neighbor’s kids were thrilled to receive n&n’s, Slickers, and Two Musketeers.

This year, I followed through on my plan to be a bit more discriminatory in who got the good stuff.

I really get a kick out of seeing 5-year-old superheroes and 4-foot tall Transformers. What I do NOT enjoy is the roving bands of teenagers who come in no perceivable disguise, knock on the door, and mutely hold out a pillow case. They don’t even go to the effort of saying, “Trick or Treat!”

In the past, I’ve tried reasoning with them. “Um, you have no costume.” – No reasoning to be had.

I’ve tried sarcasm on them. “Oooh, I can see you’re going for angry punk! Nailed it!” – Sarcasm wasted.

I’ve tried shaming them. “Um, you have no costume.” – Zilch on the shame-o-meter.

This year, I decided to hit ‘em where it hurts. Right in the taste buds.

I went out and bought a bag of candy corn. I know there are some people out there who love candy corn (including Larry and Big Jack, no doubt), but personally, I think it is one of the most disgusting food items on the planet, second only to those really nasty orange circus peanuts that have the look, feel, and taste of Styrofoam packing peanuts.

On Saturday night, whenever a cute little costumed kid came to my door, I happily placed a Twix or a Jolly Rancher into his or her bag. But whenever it was a lazy teen, looking to capitalize on October 31st, he received one single candy corn.

Boom goes the dynamite.

One kid, dressed perfectly like an extra from a high school-set movie that does not take place on Halloween, stared at me in shock and said, “That’s it??”

“That’s all you’re dressed for,” was my reply.

I almost added, “The good candy is for Top Performers only.” A tip of the hat to Latya, who would never turn the A/C in his car up all the way when he drove the gang to lunch. According to him, the highest setting was for Top Performers only.

I’d say I passed out about fifteen candy corns on Saturday night. I’m sure as heck not going to eat the rest of them. Maybe I’ll save the bag for next year, so lazy teens can get one single STALE candy corn!

On a completely unrelated note, if you know of anyone there who has a recommendation for the best way to get toilet paper out of trees, please let me know.

Several kids greeted me this morning by telling me about their Halloween experiences, their costumes, and all the candy they had scored. I heard about ghosts, Batmen, princesses, and Power Rangers, to name a few. Katie and Ava gave me Hershey’s Kisses as soon as they saw me.

Then Gwenn walked into the room, and the whole class gasped in horror. She (or someone she knows) had shaved both of her eyebrows off. I have no idea whether or not this was related in any way to Halloween. She may have just decided that November was anti-brow month for all I know. One thing’s for certain, though. The lack of eyebrows does NOT make her priti-er.

After lunch, when I started to grade the first problem with my second class, Victor suddenly spoke up and announced, “Saturday night, after trick-or-treating, we went home, and my mom was real tired, and she fell asleep on the couch, and she didn’t cook us dinner, and I was hungry, and so I had no choice but to eat all my candy. It was good!”

Good ol’ Victor. Chooses not to do his homework, but has no choice whatsoever when it comes to stuffing himself full of sugar before bedtime.

Here’s hoping the class-wide sugar high wears off by mid-week, so I can actually accomplish some teaching! Those rulers aren’t going to measure themselves!
Later,
Admiral Candy Cornelius Vanderbilt

Date: Thursday, November 5, 2009

 

To: Fred Bommerson

 

From: Jack Woodson

 

Subject: Behold the power of cheese

 

 

Hey buddy,

 

 

Tell Tiffany she can NOT have my leftover candy corns and that I’m doing her a huge favor. Weirdo.

Tom Winter sent me a five-paragraph essay extolling the virtues of those orange Styrofoam peanut candies. Don’t you guys ever do any work over there? I’m guessing not, since I also received several photographs of the Heat Pumps gang with no eyebrows. Including one of ME!! Why is my ID mug shot still on the HPU server?

Anyway, today was a beating of a day. Here I was all set to give my students the gift that is perimeter and area, but the schedule kept getting upset by interruptions. Never mind the fact that it rained all day long, so there was no outdoor recess. I can live with that. Sure, the kids get cabin fever and act like they don’t know left from right, up from down, or isotropic from anisotropic. But then I lost about an hour of class time due to two mandatory out-of-the-classroom treks.

First thing in the morning, I had to take my homeroom to another classroom so that they could do hearing tests. It’s very interesting how the kids can hear a minute little beep that tells them when to raise their hand, yet somehow they don’t hear me when I tell them to write their names on tests. Amazingly, Eddie was able to raise his hand at the beep without hearing his own name first.

I asked the nurse if it was wrong of me to tell kids who have trouble listening to “go home, get a really big spoon, and scoop all of the dirt out of your ears.”

She politely said, “Um…”

The second time loss came after lunch, when the entire 3rd and 4th grades crowded into the auditorium to listen to our counselor, Miss Rooker, talk to them about the dangers of a new drug going around local schools. This assembly was called after our Monday staff meeting (now weekly, for our pleasure!), in which a district spokesperson came and talked to us about cheese.

I’m not talking about your typical individually-wrapped slices of processed Velveeta. This is “Cheese,” the new designer drug that is sweeping the halls of Dallas-area schools.

To my knowledge, we haven’t had much of a drug problem at my school, except for the one time three years ago when a 5th grader allegedly brought in 20-some grams of marijuana. I imagine he tried to roll it up into a big construction paper doobie, but I didn’t actually witness this. Frankly, I’m just glad I haven’t had any kids watch Scarface at home and then come in and try to snort a line of Play-doh off their desk. (Say hello to my little backpack!)

Nevertheless, this new drug, cheese, is already a major problem at middle and high schools, and people are worried it will filter down into elementary schools. Cheese is a combination of black tar heroin and crushed Tylenol PM – two great tastes that taste great together! I can practically see the Colombian drug lords sitting around their compounds, going about their business, when suddenly –
“Hey! You got your Tylenol PM in my black tar heroin!”
“Hey! You got your black tar heroin in my Tylenol PM!”

Other books

Hammerfall by C. J. Cherryh
Bloody London by Reggie Nadelson
The Saffron Malformation by Walker, Bryan
La colonia perdida by John Scalzi
Breath of Memory by Ophelia Bell
The Abandoned Puppy by Holly Webb