I
get through my first Oscars in decades without Richard's notes,
predictions and ballots. Instead of sitting down for our traditional
lengthy Monday morning recap I am sent to a nearby charter middle
school to sub for a reading teacher. The campus is modern and well
equipped. The kids, about 90% Hispanic, wear uniforms. I scrawl my
name and “Happy Monday!” on the whiteboard and am reminded that
I've never had that nice teacher handwriting.
The
teacher has left a lesson. Not a scintillating one but a lesson
nevertheless. The students are referred to as “cohorts” which
conjures to me “partners in crime” and I assume she's being a
little jokey. There is a story to read about a child, a Mexican
migrant and his precious pennies and tiny reading book. After
completing the story via silent reading, there is a worksheet. A
couple of the boys are dicks but with a bit of calm firmness I manage
to get them on task. At around 9 a woman comes in and leaves a large
insulated shopping bag. The kids tell me it's their breakfast. There
are pints of milk, cereal bars and apples. Some of the kids eat a bit
but most aren't interested in any of the offerings. The delivery lady
returns about an hour later and dumps all of the untouched, uneaten
food, dozens of milk pints, cereal bars and apples into the trash.
I
get through three periods unscathed and feel that this is something I
can handle. I have a half hour lunch break during which I must attend
to business at the office. The salad I've brought from home spills
all over the floor and I wish I'd grabbed an apple and a few cereal
bars before they were disposed of. I am complacent and relaxed,
albeit hungry, having survived the morning. I lose it however with
the class after lunch. There are about six boys who never settle
down. They are rude and belligerent and mock me and it requires a
Herculean effort not to lose my cool with these thirteen-year-olds.
One girl is unsteady. Her eyes are blood red and her pupils huge. She
finally passes out at her desk. I consider calling the office but am
frightened to bring further drama to a classroom so teetering on
chaos so I just let her sit hunched over and drooling on the desk
until dismissal time.
When
I was in my twenties I worked at a Compton middle school but a
lifetime later, I am rusty. In retrospect I realize I should not have
been lulled into submission by three very manageable classes. As soon
as I sense that all hell could break loose it is time to either bag
or rework the lesson plan to make sure that there is something more
than silent reading to engage the kids. And if there's another
disaster I will change my preference to only high school.
My
battle with L.A. Unified to be instated in an Adult E.S.L. position
continues.
The
processing person who henceforth I will refer to as Bitch Lady
(although I have actually referred to her in even stronger language
that I don't recall ever having used in my life.) is officious and snide. Initially the
confusion begins when the school neglects to inform me that I've been
hired. When I am finally notified I must arrange to be processed
into the district. Bitch Lady is impossible to reach. The few
emails she does actually respond to instruct me to call her. She is
very busy. I should not waste her time with e-mail. She says that
she can talk faster than type. When I do call there is usually no
voice mail. On about the tenth try there is a voice mail greeting
and it is about a week until she responds to my message. One delay
is that she fails to tell me that I need a physical. After I've
submitted results of the physical exam and TB Test to the district
she finally returns my call only to inform me that my life credential
to teach English is no longer valid to teach English and that I must
document 40 undergraduate units of English coursework. At no small
expense I arrange to have my forty year old transcripts sent by Fed
Ex.
Figuring
that eventually I may be processed I keep an appointment to observe
an adult ESL class in East L.A. to get up to speed. The assistant
principal who arranges the visit informs me that these are two of
their most experienced teachers. Both of the instructors are about
my age and incredibly welcoming. They offer me a lot of materials
and course outlines. I observe both of them teaching. One has
written the date on the board and spelled out “nineth.” The
other does a grammar lessons on plurals and teaches the rule of
adding “es” to a word that ends with “o.” She gives tomatoes
and potatoes as examples. Unfortunately, avocado is also on the
list. Both of the teachers spend most of the teaching session sitting
in a chair. Also, they translate all of the material into Spanish,
despite a smattering of Asian students. I've been out of the
classroom forever but I still think you're supposed to teach standing
up and moving around the room and that it doesn't really help folks
to become reliant on Spanish translation. And,if the new method of
teaching beginning ESL emphasizes the memorization of grammar rules
instead of just practical communication I will be a renegade.
After
not reaching Bitch Lady's voice mail after about ten attempts I send
a very nice note to the principal apologizing for the delay which I
attribute to Bitch Lady's apparently enormous workload. I will
disclose that I am hired for this job, after not having been in the
classroom for over twenty years, due to nothing other than
name-dropping, adding that those whose names I drop know that I am
actually a very competent teacher. The principal phones me seconds
after I send the e-mail. “You're all processed,” she informs me.
I explain that this is impossible because I haven't even been
fingerprinted or had my credential registered. She notices that my
name is listed as Lynne Murphy and not Layne Murphy although my
address and telephone number is correct. I am instructed to call
one of the big adult division honchos. He takes my call immediately
and informs me that Bitch Lady's schedule is absolutely open the next
day and he writes me in on her calendar for nine a.m.
After
waiting an hour, Bitch Lady saunters out and asks for my paperwork.
Although she has to verify the validity of my credential online
herself she demands that I print a copy at the waiting room computer.
Staff scurry around trying to find the computer passwords and when
they do, I am unable to get online. When I finally connect and am
able to locate my credential at the Office of Teacher Credentialing
she marches out before I am able to push print, irritated that I've
taken so long. and pushes me away in order to print it herself.
Then
she has difficulty with my transcripts. There are no grades or
units. “I can't prove that you have forty units of English.” I
explain that it's clear that more than 25% of my coursework was in
English and in that I was issued a bachelor's degree I must have
accomplished the equivalent of 40 units. This just irritates her.
Unless I can get the school to confirm that each course is worth 4
units she will not process me. She agrees that if she can reach
someone at the college by phone she will validate my credential. She
proceeds to photocopy all 80 pages of my transcript. Fortunately
Number One Son is a recent graduate. He provides me with direct
phone numbers for the college director and registrar. I attempt to
offer these number to Bitch Lady to save her the time of going
through the switchboard, as she photocopies. She informs me curtly
that she will speak to me when she is ready and that I am to return
to my seat. I leave messages, trying to give the director and
registrar a heads up and wait. Bitch Lady has already informed me
that she is off work on Friday so unless I can get confirmation about
the unit equivalency I will be unable to start my class on Monday.
By
this time I have waited over four hours. I suspect that my principal
has made a bit of a stink about Bitch Lady processing the wrong
teacher. One of the higher ups in the adult division comes looking
for me in the waiting room. She says she just wants to make sure
that everything is going fine. I am near tears when I report to her
about how truly not fine things are going. Within minutes, her boss,
the nice man I'd spoken to the day before, comes out. Being familiar
with Santa Cruz and other alternative colleges he has no problem with
the transcripts. He says that it would be good to have something
from the school but that I'm fine to start teaching as soon as my
fingerprints clear.
He
walks me over to the mandatory child abuse reporting video. By the
time that's done, the fingerprint person has left for lunch so I wait
an hour for her to return. Despite having filled out about thirty
forms, apparently Bitch Lady hasn't given me the correct ones for the
fingerprinting processes. Fingerprint lady is beyond annoyed as she
must traverse twenty five feet to get the correct forms. In that I
have forms to complete I lose my place in line and have to wait about
another hour. Fingerprint lady has a big sign that says “22 Days
to Go!” and a photo of herself wearing a t-shirt that says
“Straight Outta Beaudry” (The enormous administrative complex is
on Beaudry Street). She is very fussy about where I stand and how I
hold my hands while she records my fingerprints. Several weeks ago I
undergo another Live Scan for my sub job and it's explained that the
older you are, the more lined your hands become and it is harder to
get good prints. The computer beeps “reject” again and again.
If I weren't so exhausted and she weren't so rough about moving my
hands over the screen I probably would have been tickled to fuck with
her a bit.
I
am cautiously optimistic that I will become an official LAUSD
instructor but after the demeaning processing I'm too low and
disgusted by the bureaucracy and mean-spiritedness to be really
stoked. Nevertheless, I try to get as many errands taken care of to
free me up to lesson plan and teach. Kitten Harry, who, with his
litter-mate Jerry, has been such an enormous comfort during these
months of nearly unbearable loss, has been treated for a fever and
eye condition. He seems improved but his eyes still look funny and
he isn't playful. I take him back to the vet for a recheck. Despite
moving around and eating normally, he is running a high fever and his
labs indicate leukemia. The vet feels that he cannot be cured and
will shortly begin to waste and suffer. He is euthanized. Himself
and I are devastated, having lost Gary the cat, not to mention a dear
lifetime friend within the last months.
The
ESL coordinator for my school asks me to attend an orientation
session. Between the day of processing and the loss of sweet Harry I
am weary. Nevertheless, I head over to Roosevelt High, where I
taught about thirty years ago. The Adult School office, except for
a couple of computers is completely unchanged and I remember things I
haven't thought about in years. The coordinator is earnest and whip
smart. There is another new teacher too and we are loaded up with
materials. I notice that the word “cohort” is used on a lot of
the schedules so I guess that's a new buzzword and that the teacher I
subbed for wasn't being ironic. Also, there seems to be a big thing
about “binders.” The district office requires me to complete
about forty different forms. Stacks and stacks of file boxes line the
halls. Teachers and students are supposed to have binders for
everything. The teaching methods and emphasis really does seem
progressive but the system seems light years away from being forest friendly.
The
emphasis has changed and ESL is now treated as the first step towards
either an academic or vocational trajectory rather than just a genial
couple hours to learn a bit of English. I never much liked the
materials we were provided with and usually made my own. Now, the
books and worksheet I've been given are terrific, focusing on real
life skills like filling out forms, ordering a pizza or navigating
the DMV. I will have my own classroom with a computer, projector and
any other materials I need are readily at hand.
We
are taken on a tour of the campus. It is the last week of the
trimester. If my fingerprints clear I will be teaching the first
night of the next session. Most of the students are in the
cafeteria. They are eating and celebrating and getting certificates
for having completed coursework. I remember how happy I was in this
place so many years ago and tear up. There are indeed assholes and
nincompoops and old school teachers locked into speaking Spanish and
teaching grammar but the students are awesome. Most come to class
after working a full day. English is a hard language. I realize
this particularly when I hear what many native speakers do to it.
ESL students often haven't gone beyond grade school in their home
countries. Many come from rural communities. I can't begin to
fathom how daunting and weird Los Angeles must be. Even signing up
to take an English class must pose a challenge. Lately studies
measure not only student's intelligence but also “grit” as a
determiner for success. After a trying week I am comforted knowing
that in a small way I will be able to make this overwhelming city a
bit easier to navigate for people who are eager to learn and possess an abundance of grit.
1 comment:
WOW, what an ordeal they put you through getting your credentials finalized!! Sounds like Bitch Lady hates her job with a passion or just sucks at her job or has early frontal lobe dementia.
So sorry about little Harry. What a shock. Indeed too much loss in a short period. Thinking of you. Love, Rosemary XX
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