We'd travel more if we had more time
off, more money and didn't miss our pets so much. In Venice, based
on a cell phone picture, we have a mask painted of our beloved tuxedo
cat, Gary. When we return, the cat is ill and a few days later takes
the last ride to the vet for the trip to kitty heaven. We adopt two
tiny tuxedo litter mates, Jerry and Harry from the Kitty Bungalow.
They arrive home and immediately perch, like their predecessor Gary,
and his predecessor, Malcolm, on Himself's shoulder and nuzzle close
while he works on his laptop. A few weeks after the arrival of the
kittens our dear friend Richard dies suddenly. The frolicking cuddly
Harry and Jerry are a balm during some very dark days. Harry's third
eyelid starts to protrude and the vet diagnoses FIP, a sort of kitty
AIDS, very rare, untreatable and fatal. We have the tiny fellow
euthanized and watch his outgoing frisky brother Jerry grow.
I notice that Jerry is listless and
eating less. I am told that it is extremely unusual for litter mates
to both be afflicted with FIP. I contact the Kitty Bungalow and am
informed that the other three kittens in the litter have also
contracted FIP. A number of veterinarians who specialize in shelter
medicine scratch their heads. Jerry is eating although only fresh
chicken, torn into tiny bits and fed to him by hand. He moves
through the house and jumps up on the counter but, once the most
playful cat we have ever owned, he no longer plays. Cold, as the
systems apparently start to shut down, he sleeps on top of the cable
box all day. I don't know how much longer he has and I don't know
what to wish for.
As my students trickle in I have some
American music playing. It is the 50th anniversary of the
release of Pet Sounds so I play that one night. Bob Dylan is turning
75 so the next day I put on Blonde on Blonde. It strikes me how
impossibly young these songs are. In the minutes before my students
begin to wander in, the old familiar records evoke a brutal reminder
of time and mortality,When I first heard this music, Dylan warbling
on state-of-the-art monaural Fedco record player, lying in the
ballerina bedroom on Fulton Avenue, I never imagined that fifty years
later I'd be in a classroom in East Los Angeles, streaming music and
thinking about death,
There are only three more weeks of
school left. I have no summer assignment. I receive notice that my
contract has expired. The e-mails I send inquiring about the
possibility of a fall assignment are unanswered. I don't know if
this is the end or the beginning. Since starting in March, I have
run my little business and prepared lessons and not much else.
Statistics show that the biggest predictor of student success, is not
class size, but instead the amount of time teachers have outside of
class to prepare and consult with other educators. I have tried to
compensate for not being up to date on the latest pedagogic technique
by throwing every waking hour of free time I have into planning
lessons and paying careful attention to what works and what doesn't.
I would not trade the experience for anything but for all of the time
expended I earn, I believe, far less than the minimum wage. If I
didn't have a very flexible day job, I suspect that lack of time for
preparation would render me an extremely ineffectual instructor.
This is the week of the CASAS test,
which ostensibly provides confirmation to the taxpayers that they are
getting their money's worth on the investment in adult education. The
test form asks about work and legal status and other measures of
“good citizenship.” I have to teach my students to write a
check. None of them have checking accounts. My own children
wouldn't know how to write a check with a gun to their heads. I only
write two or three a year myself. Yet, we practice with payees and
writing out dollar amounts.
The difference between gross and net
income on a check stub is another lesson. They are all paid in cash.
I subtract withheld taxes from the gross on a sample pay-stub. Heidi
points out that my math is incorrect. She worked in a bank in El
Salvador. I still don't know if she's pregnant. When the students
see how much is typically withheld for taxes they realize that maybe
it isn't so bad to be reliant on an underground economy. But, when I
explain about social security benefits, many of them think again. We
practice filling out employment and rental applications. In a city
where Spanish speakers outnumber English speakers it is unlikely that
any of my students will ever encounter a non-bilingual form. Then,
there is a big emphasis on traffic signage. Students who are
licensed drivers recognize all of the signs. The pedestrians know
what's pertinent to them and are bored and befuddled by “merge”
or “yield.”
Some of the required materials are of
use. They like restaurant menus, but all of us find the “one size
fits all” assumption inherent in standardized testing tedious and
wasteful of the short 13 week session that we have. Plus, the
materials I am given to use are crappy and filled with typos. I
create from scratch power plan lessons, worksheets and games to make
the often irrelevant materials more palatable.
Cesar has only been in the class for
three weeks. He is newly here from Mexico but confesses to a Netflix
addiction to which he attributes his good spoken English. He's a big
fan of Etta James and Nina Simone. When I remark that Blonde on
Blonde was recorded in 1967, he can't believe it. One night after
class he tells me that he is on a visitor's visa. “I really want
to work,” he tells me. “I want to learn English and get a job.”
He's a licensed physical therapist, from Matamoros, a town on the
Texas border. “Everyone else in the class works. How do they do
it?” I tell him that I don't know and that I assume that most of
the other students are undocumented, but that I avoid delving into
this. Boyle Heights, I tell him, is quite politically active and I
print out information about a few immigrant rights organizations. As
an educated professional he might be able to get a temporary worker
visa. It is a mystery to me however that so many unskilled people,
with limited education, are able to survive and support themselves
completely off the books. I tell Cesar to watch the film “A Day
Without a Mexican” in which the Hispanic community suddenly
vanishes and the city of Los Angeles comes to a standstill. He
doesn't realize that I'm only half kidding when I suggest that he
just find an American to marry.
Ricardo's brother Antonio has been
absent for about four weeks. He doesn't live with Ricardo and his
girlfriend is expecting a baby at any moment. Antonio, reports
brother Ricardo, is very stressed out and working a lot of extra
hours. Ricardo and Antonio, like my boys are about three years apart
and they look the same, but different, in the same way that my boys
do. Ricardo struggles with his writing but he shows up nightly and
works very hard. He is, at 23, the youngest student to have stuck
with the class since March. On the night of the CASAS test, Antonio
wanders in. I know that the test will be challenging for him.
Younger brother Ricardo is obviously delighted to see him and they
sit in the back row cracking each other up. Antonio looks through
the test. I know that some of it will be baffling to him. Younger
brother Ricardo knows this too. I give Ricardo a dirty look when I
see him, rather indiscreetly helping Antonio. Ricardo shrugs and
makes cow eyes. “He's my brother.”
After the tension of the CASAS test we
play charades. The coat ladies are mortified but rise to the
occasion and manage to get the opposing team to guess “flower”
and “fat.” It's Eduardo, our class clown's turn. He stands,
clears his throat officiously and stomps his foot. The students
guess “teacher” instantaneously. Seldom have so many laughed so
hard.
I have a dilemma. One student in each
class is awarded at the end of the year for outstanding
accomplishment and receives free textbooks for the next semester.
Older Juan, who works as a custodian in a Vernon factory and has
memorized Das Kapital, attends regularly and works very hard. He's
just a few years younger than I am and I sympathize with how
difficult it can be to learn new things. Estella never misses a
class and studies by herself at home. She is patient and helps the
less advanced students and perhaps demonstrates the most marked
improvement in written and spoken English. Young Ricardo, while
still a bit pokey on the written stuff is fearless and speaks
intelligibly and has perhaps the best understanding of any of the
student. Heidi, has improved her atrocious pronunciation a lot and
is a great sport about being corrected. She never misses a night and
her written work has improved enormously. The truth is, there are a
couple of students who only attend rarely and haven't accomplished
much, but I wish I could give each one of the others the prize.
There is an Adult Ed workshop with
training to use a new online CASAS preparation program designed for
iPad that will be used in the Fall. Even though I have no idea
whether the budget will allow for hiring non-tenured teachers and my
superiors have ignored my queries about reinstatement, I am curious.
We are given iPads. I have never used one but I am able to figure
it out. The teacher next to me has subbed at my school. He is about
ten years younger than I am and in the school parking lot puts a
canvas cover over his car for the duration of his two hour teaching
session. He struggles with the iPad and I help him turn it on and
get to the correct application. Even though I have a bit of trouble
switching between applications, myself, I am successfully able to
help him a number of other times. Later I explain FTP sites to
another younger male teacher. I feel smug and superior.
The online program is perfect. It
would have saved me many hours of preparing my own materials and
gives the teacher feedback on the progress and strengths and
weaknesses of each individual student. There are carts of iPads now
for every campus although enough only for each class to use them for
about a week each trimester. But enrolled students will have access
to the program themselves to operate on home computers and phones. I
know that a strong digital component would result for me in much more
effective teaching and that the L.A. Adult's schools ESL instruction
is about to take a huge leap.
I return home from the training, sad
that there's a good chance I'll never get to work with iPads in a
classroom and ready to try to hand feed Jerry, like a baby bird,
microscopic pieces of chicken. He eats more enthusiastically than he
has in ages, batting my hand away and gobbling from the saucer
himself. Later, he finds his favorite pink puff ball and bats it
around. He digs his claws, with great gusto, into every piece of
upholstered furniture in the house. He chases the dog's tail and
then falls asleep on top, straddling her as if atop a little pony.
Sometimes I guess there is a brief
rally preceding a rapid decline. Still, it is totally swell to have
the pesky thing back in action, even if it's only temporary. After
thirteen consummately satisfying weeks I likely will not be asked
again to teach. Happiness, like life, is never more than temporary.
Too temporary to waste time with old music maudlin. Still, I might
never find out if Heidi's pregnant.
1 comment:
Beautiful and sad.
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