Last week I was working in my classroom when someone brought in a new student to introduce to me. We bonded over the fact that I had a few Diary of a Wimpy Kid books on my shelf, and within minutes he was signing one out to take home to read over the weekend. As he got ready to write the first entry for the year on the yellow legal pad that serves as my library record, he turned to me and said, "Wait, what's my name?"
I laughed and said, "You're asking me your name? I just met you!"
It turns out that this student, like many of the kids I teach, has more than one name. Sure enough, when I checked my class list, the first name he's been using at the school he's been attending in the States isn't the same one I've been given. That's OK; I assured him that I would call him whichever name he preferred and that I can keep track of both of them. He went away happy with something to read (I love it when I help people find something to read).
Later, I was thinking about this incident, and I wondered how many of my students are thinking about who they're going to be this year - not what name they are going to use, necessarily, but what kind of person they'll be. Are they wondering whether I'm remembering trouble they got into last year, or in the case of kids I haven't taught before, whether I've talked to their teachers from last year to get an idea of what to expect from them? Are they fretting over a new appearance that suddenly happened over the summer? Are they worrying about friendship situations that festered last year or maybe have developed in the class group chats since school let out in June?
We all want to be seen and known, and loved for who we are. We want to look at the people in our lives and say, "What's my name?" and have them answer accurately, lovingly, as though our names, our identities, our personalities, are safe with them.
I want my students to know that they get a fresh start tomorrow when school starts. I don't know many of the seventh graders, and I'm assuming the best about them. I do know most of the eighth graders, and I'm assuming the best about them, too. Goofy behavior from seventh grade is in the past. But they don't just get a fresh start tomorrow. They get a fresh start every Monday. They get a fresh start every day. They get a fresh start every time they come into my classroom, every time I ask to speak to them privately in the hallway about their behavior, every time I find them dawdling back from the bathroom or crying or trying to get into their locker or whatever.
You know what? They give me a fresh start, too. I can't tell you how many times I've ended a day discouraged and defeated, mad at myself because I spoke harshly or handled a situation badly, and then the next morning the kid in question has come in as though nothing has happened, saying, "Hi, Mrs. H." Sometimes it doesn't happen that fast; sometimes there are meetings and conversations and apologies on both sides. But in general I find my students treat me with remarkable grace. I try to do the same for them.
We're all still growing. I'm not growing physically any more, but in some ways I feel as though I'm changing these days as dramatically as my middle schoolers. There's always room to learn and gain maturity. They teach me as much as I teach them.
And speaking of learning and growing, I've been working on my Quinquagenarian Writing Project (QWP). I figured I needed a little head start, since I'm about to go back into a season of constant grading. I have three first drafts in my QWP folder, and I'm nearly finished with a fourth.
I can't wait to see my kids tomorrow, to start finding out who they are right now.
14 hours ago
3 comments:
I love your post, Ruth, and the talk about fresh starts. Teachers get one too, don't they? I always used the words "tabula rasa" or "clean slate" with my students, something you might want to know if you don't already. Best wishes tomorrow for a wonderful day!
Ah, we are all still growing! And we get to start again. What good news. Thinking of you and praying for you today Ruth. Those students are so lucky to have you for their teacher.
Great post, Ruth. Here's to the grace of giving others and ourselves fresh starts.
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