I attend another mandatory (and unpaid)
L.A. Unified Schools training session. I shell out $7 to park in
order to learn about computerized attendance keeping. Until now I
have kept attendance with a pencil on a bubble-in form. Most of my
students are not listed on this form but there are a dozen names of
students I have never seen and have no enrollment records for.
Perhaps, this will be straightened out when I am able to enter
nightly attendance via computer. There is however some glitch with
my assignment and my e-mail has yet to be entered into the attendance
system. I am told that I am to begin keeping attendance via computer
next week, but the other new teacher from my school and I, unlike all
of the other teachers at the training, are unable to access our
classes. No one is quite sure how to remedy the problem. The system
requires three separate log-ins, each with unique passwords. I
could have learned the actual process in about thirty seconds online.
But then I would not have received a ten page color printed
explanation booklet or a certificate of completion. I have another
certificate for having completed an online course pertaining to the
mandatory reporting of child abuse. I am completely baffled by the
certificate thing. It turns out that the useless laptop that I am
issued will be actually necessary to report attendance. The district
has a firewall and can only be accessed from the fifteen year old
laptop, via modem, on the school campus. We are advised that we
should turn on the computer before we start teaching and two and a
half hours later, when class is done, it should be fully booted up
and ready for recording attendance.
When the training is over it takes me
forty-five minutes in heavy downtown traffic to arrive at my regular
teaching assignment. I am frazzled near tears and within half an
hour I misplace a box of pens, the keys to my classroom and a folder
of tests. Penny, the teacher next door points out that I've spelled
“surprize” instead of “surprise” on the key to a worksheet
I've made. Then she finds the missing tests on a table in the center
of the room with my teaching materials. She cautions me that all
tests must be kept under lock and key. I dutifully transfer them to
a filing cabinet, even though they're not exactly SAT or the
California Bar. Who would steal a placement test in order to be
assigned to ESL 1B instead of 1A.?
I prepare a lesson about Cesar Chavez
as, the school is one block from Cesar Chavez Avenue, and my students
have no idea who he is. The day after the holiday honoring him I
start with vocabulary like “strike,” “boycott,” “social
justice” “farmworker”and show them photos. I simplify the
biography and show them a bit of footage of Chavez speaking. I
accidentally click out of the Powerpoint presentation a couple times
and a photo of Jerry, my cat, flashes huge on the whiteboard. The
students stumble through the vocabulary and watch the
strikes and speeches but there is no demonstration of pride or
fraternity. Just because he had brown skin I cannot foist Cesar
Chavez upon my students as a hero.
My goal for the week is to complete
chapter 9 of the textbook. The focus is the simple present tense but
the author definitely has a more international student body in mind.
There are pages of drills. “ I speak Japanese. I live in Moscow.
He speaks Arabic. They live in Lima.” All of my students speak
Spanish. “I speak Spanish. You speak Spanish. He speaks Spanish.
She speaks Spanish. They speak Spanish. We speak Spanish.”
Having a class comprised entirely of Spanish speakers in a way is
easier. They often have the same trouble spots. I've been working
on the addition of an “e” sound to an “s” I e-see. You
e-speak. We e-sit. We e-spend a lot of time e-studying this. I have
them use their phones to record and playback conversations and it
really seems to help when they can actually hear themselves.
Oscar is at about the same level as all
of the other students but for some reason he repeats every word
without any accent. When we work on
“hour,” “our,” and “are,” he nails it. My other students,
no matter how much I over-enunciate, cannot hear the difference. On
a hunch, I ask Oscar if he likes music. It turns out that he does,
passionately, preferring American rock to video games and television.
My gut tells me that there's more to it than simply being able to
imitate American singers. In This
is Your Brain on Music: The Science of a Human Obsession,
neuroscientist Daniel Levitin explores the connection between music
and intellectual evolution. Being music lover myself, I have always
had a sense that perhaps my audio perception is particularly keen.
The week is short and I am nervous
about getting the chapter done. On Wednesday, already way behind, I am told to dismiss a
half hour early for a teachers meeting. A new policy, it is
announced, is being instituted and every other Thursday there will be
a “mixer” for all ESL students, levels 1-6 in order to practice
speaking English. We will take turns planning them. Tim, a rather
shaggy and really affable younger teacher has invented a game for the
first one. Numbered blanks are printed on a sheet of paper. Each
individual sheet has a single word written in red ink. The objective
is that participants ask each other for their red words until all 76
of the words that comprise the first verse of “The Star Spangled
Banner,” are collected.
Penny next door and I both have lower
level classes, she is 1A and I am 1B. We both know that our students
are going to be completely baffled. I make up a mini-red word game
and print copies. Penny, spelling “surprise” correctly, writes in
the red words. The message is “No test tonight. We have a
surprise in the cafeteria.” We combine our two classes for a
practice round, before we send them to the compete against levels 5
and 6 at the main event. Penny's section contains an older couple,
the type of students that in my previous teaching iteration, we
referred to, hopefully, as “pre-literate.” Our school has no
place for non-readers and they are just stuck into level 1A. Gloria
uses a cane and speaks in a gravelly, Mercedes McCambridge-ish voice.
Penny reports that Gloria is a bit ornery. Her husband's posture is
stooped. He wears a ranchero hat. Both are usually more than a
little lubricated. Gloria is annoyed at being dragged to the
cafeteria for the Red Word game. As I lock the classroom door behind
her, she rasps in Spanish, “Oh Paco. What are we going to do? We
can't read. We can't write. Why don't they just make us wait in the
bathroom?”
I notice the other students help Gloria
and Paco write down red words. Most of the teachers participate
too. There are some particular challenges, like “ramparts” and
“twilight” and many of the words have to be spelled out. I
notice that even the advanced students have trouble with certain
different letters. “A” is often confused with “E” and “G”
and “J.” While, I'm of the hippy “This Land is Your Land' should be the national anthem," ilk, Red Word gets all of the students
and teachers speaking English together for an hour and everyone, even
perhaps Gloria and Paco, has a lot of fun.
There's about forty-five minutes of
class after the Red Word. Tim, the event planner, offers me a CD of
the “Star Spangled Banner.” He's burned one for each of the
teachers. I decline, telling him that I have a powerpoint. Which I
now realize sounds like I'm a total asshole. I tell my class that I
don't sing. “You don't want to sing, do you?” They shake their
heads timidly and I don't know if they're simply differing to me or
based on words like “twilight” and “ramparts,” they don't
give a rat's ass about singing the friggin' song.
“The Star-Spangled Banner is our
national anthem,” I begin. “National” a cognate but I know
“anthem” has them at sea “Our national song. Do you have a
national song, a patriotic song from your country?” “Patriot”
is another cognate. There are three middle-aged women who wear
parka-like jackets zipped up to their chins for the duration of the
class. I imagine the room temperature is about 75 degrees
Fahrenheit. One of the coat ladies starts trying to explain something
like three branches. Or three something. She gesticulates and
struggles, as I've commanded her, to only speak English. I don't
understand a damn thing she's saying but I love how hard she's trying and how easy it would be for her to slip into Spanish. I smile and nod.
I show the class a little educational film about Francis Scott Key and the battle that inspired the song. They get the gist of it I think. Big battle. Flag survives. Rah rah rah. I can't find a "Bouncing Ball." Instead I select a seventies film where a choir of kids in red, white and blue sequined vests sing the song, holding hands and walking around in a circle while the words roll across the screen. This is intercut with the flag being raised at Iwo Jima, The Lincoln Memorial and Neil Armstrong walking on the moon. Rah rah rah.
From three bungalows away we hear Tim, the creator of the Red Word game singing along with the cassette and demonstrating considerable more gusto than talent. I ask my students again, "You really don't want to sing, do you?"Hearing the teacher three bungalows away, they shake their heads "no," and this time I have no doubt about their sincerity. Certain now that they are happy not to sing the Star Spangled Banner, I show a third clip. This is of Lady Gaga singing the national anthem at the Superbowl. The students bolt upright, entranced. Poor Cesar Chavez. I can't stand the song but despite the intercutting of bawling football players and troops in Afghanistan standing at attention, Gaga is pure gold. With the volume turned up all the way we can still her Tim, soldiering on and trying to hit the high notes on "land of the free..."
The Red Word game for over 200 students must have taken days of preparation. And then the new bitch teacher with the fancy powerpoint is too good for the CDs he's burned. The repeated enthusiastic singing of "The Star Spangled Banner" must be exhausting. The final clip on my presentation is the infamous one of Roseanne at the opening of a Padres game, warbling the anthem like Alfalfa in Our Gang and scratching her crotch. I don't play it. Instead, I write "A E I O U" on the whiteboard. "You guys really need to practice your vowels. I point to the "A" and I notice that after playing the Red Word game for an hour there is quite a bit less hesitation. I tell them that they still need to work on the alphabet and that next week we absolutely (cognate) positively (cognate) have to finish Chapter 9.
I show the class a little educational film about Francis Scott Key and the battle that inspired the song. They get the gist of it I think. Big battle. Flag survives. Rah rah rah. I can't find a "Bouncing Ball." Instead I select a seventies film where a choir of kids in red, white and blue sequined vests sing the song, holding hands and walking around in a circle while the words roll across the screen. This is intercut with the flag being raised at Iwo Jima, The Lincoln Memorial and Neil Armstrong walking on the moon. Rah rah rah.
From three bungalows away we hear Tim, the creator of the Red Word game singing along with the cassette and demonstrating considerable more gusto than talent. I ask my students again, "You really don't want to sing, do you?"Hearing the teacher three bungalows away, they shake their heads "no," and this time I have no doubt about their sincerity. Certain now that they are happy not to sing the Star Spangled Banner, I show a third clip. This is of Lady Gaga singing the national anthem at the Superbowl. The students bolt upright, entranced. Poor Cesar Chavez. I can't stand the song but despite the intercutting of bawling football players and troops in Afghanistan standing at attention, Gaga is pure gold. With the volume turned up all the way we can still her Tim, soldiering on and trying to hit the high notes on "land of the free..."
The Red Word game for over 200 students must have taken days of preparation. And then the new bitch teacher with the fancy powerpoint is too good for the CDs he's burned. The repeated enthusiastic singing of "The Star Spangled Banner" must be exhausting. The final clip on my presentation is the infamous one of Roseanne at the opening of a Padres game, warbling the anthem like Alfalfa in Our Gang and scratching her crotch. I don't play it. Instead, I write "A E I O U" on the whiteboard. "You guys really need to practice your vowels. I point to the "A" and I notice that after playing the Red Word game for an hour there is quite a bit less hesitation. I tell them that they still need to work on the alphabet and that next week we absolutely (cognate) positively (cognate) have to finish Chapter 9.
2 comments:
Layne you are my hero. x
Beautiful.
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