I need to start by saying that I have amazing colleagues. I
learn from them every day, and once in a while, they allow me to share with
them, too. That said, here is a short social media post I stole from my friend
(and colleague) Rillene:
“Last Friday the
power went out before school. Imagine a junior high full of 1200 hormonally
charged pubescent "darlings" cruising the dark halls of school.
Excitement doesn't even begin to cover it.
(Borrowed from Rillene's post) |
“So I turned on the
lantern and began writing the lesson on the white board. We would play pioneer
school and the students would copy the assignment from the board. To my
surprised delight, when student started entering my room they seemed pretty
excited to play.
“Well, about three
minutes before 8, the power comes back on. My students are sooooo disappointed!
Whining commences. "Why can't we have class with the lights out?!"
they cry.
“So we did. They were
so engaged!! We went through our lesson on sentence combining and introductory
prepositional phrases by lantern light. They copied everything from the board.
No goofing or messing around--just learning. Happy, happy learning.
“We did turn on the
lights during our second hour together when the principal came in for
evaluation--the kids understood. The real kicker was when my next bunch of
sevies came in for their two period class, the first thing they said was, ‘Did
Pod 1 really get to have class in the dark? Why can't we?’
“So we did. And today,
after the weekend break, Pods 2 & 4 wanted to have their lesson ‘the
pioneer way’ too.
“Maybe I should write
an article--Teaching in the Dark Leads to Student Engagement.”
Another colleague (and friend), Jaimie, posted her
musings as well: “Starting the school day
in the dark... #nowindowsinmyclassroom #creepy #whatdoIdonow #Icouldhavesleptin”
(Stolen from Jaimie) |
However, several less-experienced
teachers stopped me and asked what to do with their classes. Many had prepared
technology-based lessons, pouring their hearts and souls into yet another
PowerPoint, placing their faith in a montage of YouTube clips. I reflected and
shared with them some of my experiences when my students were literally left in
the dark.
The worst power outage I navigated occurred several years
ago when a car collided with a power transformer a few blocks away and took out
the lights from 2nd period through 4th periods, and the
administration decided that the students should just stay in the same class
until everything was sorted out.
Yes, chaos ensued in some parts of the school.
However, I took a different tack. I had an extremely large class of 37 squirrely
seventh graders, including two of the most challenging students I have ever had
in my seventeen years. I also grabbed a few knuckleheads who had been haunting
the shadowy halls and screaming or moaning randomly, pretending to be the
spirits of previous students who hadn’t endured the torture of junior high. Their
pre-pubescent giggles were a dead giveaway. No one was fooled, and I hauled the
wannabe hooligans into my room so they wouldn’t add to the mayhem.
I quickly scratched a sign by light of cell phone to
hang outside my room warning others that we were busy learning, and I closed
the door. The dimness that emanated from the emergency lights in the hall was
completely blotted out.
Cue seventh grade scream.
It was hard to tell if the boys or girls were pitched
higher, but the noise died immediately when I clicked the switch of my
flashlight. I perched on my stool at the front of the room, the light hovering
directly under my face. In a ghostly whisper I directed everyone to a seat.
Students flicked their eyes back and forth at each other, wondering what was
happening.
Without another word, I opening a ponderous tome of
not-so-forgotten lore and began reading:
“TRUE!
--nervous --very, very dreadfully nervous I had been and am; but why will you
say that I am mad? The disease had sharpened my senses --not destroyed --not
dulled them. Above all was the sense of hearing acute. I heard all things in
the heaven and in the earth. I heard many things in hell. How, then, am I mad?
Hearken! and observe how healthily --how calmly I can tell you the whole story.
By the time I
finished the first paragraph of Poe’s “The Tell-Tale Heart,” the crowd was
captivated. Now, I pride myself on being an engaging oral reader, but this was
an all-time best. Not a student stirred. Not a sound came from within the four
walls of my domain. Muffled din came from the hallway, but my audience was
hooked.
(Lifted from https://www.tes.com/lessons/qvmo-UKUj 5McYA/tell-tale-heart-by-edgar-allen-poe) |
When I finished about twenty minutes
later, we had a discussion about mood—an element we had discussed earlier in
the year—and identified elements that made a difference in the telling of the
story: the dark, the skills of the reader, the attention of the listener. We
discussed Poe’s craft: his sentence structure, his vocabulary, his tone.
When that discussion ended, I asked
them what they wanted to do next. Unanimously, they begged me to read more to
them. I don’t remember what we moved on to, but I think we did some more Poe
and maybe another short story or two. I do remember a couple students ask if we
could read something that wasn’t so creepy. Then just before the decision for
the cafeteria to begin preparing cold lunches was announced, the lights came
back on, and the day went forward as normally as possible.
Opportunities like this are rare,
but they need not be a total waste of time as Rillene demonstrated. Every day
presents an opportunity for learning. Students sit metaphorically in the dark
all the time. However, the light a teacher can provide only lasts so long.
Eventually those batteries need to be changed or a new wick needs to be lit.
Taking every opportunity to spark a student’s own interest in learning is where
the real light of education happens.
During the power outage, I could
have wasted time, but I created an experience, one that never happened again,
one that the students will always remember. About a month ago I ran into a
former student from that class at a restaurant. She asked if I remembered the
day I read “The Tell-Tale Heart” in the dark. Of course I did. It became a
shared bond between the 40 or so of us who were in that classroom. It was a
jumping-off point for other learning to happen. When we talked about author
craft, I used it as a model, as many of my students wanted to write about
characters going insane. I illustrated how as a junior in high school, I
meticulously poured over Poe’s narration and how it served as a mentor text for
me when I wrote “The Ultimate Sin” during Mr. Bainter’s history class (not a
bad story for a sixteen-year-old), showing them how I purposely shortened my
sentences as the narrator lost his mind, similar to Poe’s protagonist.
Sharing that experience sparked more interest in writing and publishing.
I think “The Ultimate Sin” was the only short story I ever got paid for ($20)
including it in a student-run literary magazine. After the class decided to
approach “The Cask of Amontillado,” we revisited writing creepy settings and
using symbolism—topics students usually try to avoid more than back-stabbing
friends. By the end of the year, thematic discussions about perfect crimes and
guilt always came back to “The Tell-Tale Heart.” I even had a few advanced
students asking if they could borrow my copy of Crime and Punishment. None ever finished the Dostoyevsky, but the
point is that it created a spark. They wanted to know more. Was it on the
lesson plan that day? Absolutely not. Most of the best learning deviates from
the plan a little. It happens when students become intrigued by a side note, or
their interest is piqued by one of the non-required readings, or an anecdote
told during work time tickles their inquisitive bone. Rillene, Jaimie, and most
of my teaching colleagues around the world know this and exploit this teaching
tactic on a regular basis.
(Taken from http://karlsprague.com/strangers- sparks-stecchino-bistro/) |
Students construct their own learning (APA-style Constructivist
citations deliberately left out today), but it is up to the teacher to create
an environment where sparks can fly. Some students choose to remain in the
dark, and we can loan them a little light, but it can only last for so long.
Getting to know students and where their interests lie provides a little
tinder. Helping them make meaningful connection scrapes the flint against the
steel. And pretty soon the flames shine brightly, and you pray that no one or
nothing (like a standardized test or something like that) douses the flame of
curiosity, leaving them in the dark once again. However, rest assured that once
a student has tasted that spark, has seen the light, felt the glow, or whatever
other heat analogy you want to throw in here, she will always remember what it
felt like, and will hunger after it. Most of the time, you just need a little
fuel and the right conditions. And I repeat, it’s up to the teacher to
cultivate prime conditions to burn.
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