Showing posts with label Guys Write for Guys Read. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guys Write for Guys Read. Show all posts

26 August 2020

Kindergarten Trouble

               I have written about being a follower multiple times in my life. See, Jack Gantos’s “The Follower” in Guys Write for Guys Read (ed. Jon Scieszka) is one of my favorite literary prompts for students. I usually write with my students. Now, I am running out of stories. Either that or I’m subconsciously blocking memories, for I’m pretty sure that I didn’t learn to be a leader for quite a while. And some would still debate whether I ever stopped being a follower. Regardless, these stories are a little rarer now. Here’s a little twist about being a follower and not able to speak up for myself. 

              In Arkansas, you can’t start public school until you are five years old. I had been reading more or less since I was two, but the school system still didn’t want to take me. Perhaps in part because I wore a little on my mother’s patience, and part because I needed something to stimulate my mind other than cartoons, game shows, and torturing my little brothers, she wanted me in school. My precociousness, however, was only accepted at a private school, though, so that’s where I started: at Wilkes’ Academy Lil People School. (I recently returned to the area; the school doesn’t exist anymore. The buildings currently house a dance studio.) I was only four years old.

              Despite my youth, in Kindergarten I prided myself on being the top student in Ms. Cogwell’s class: model citizen, top reader, the only kid who only had to go half day instead of staying the full time and forced to take a nap after lunch. A few incidents, however, showed me a little humility.

              My very first experience having a substitute teacher was a scary if not traumatic one. I had never experienced anything like it. In addition to this chaos, our school, because of its small enrollment, as I soon found out, would sometimes do activities with another small private school or two. The first day with a sub happened to be one of those days. We were going to do some project with planets and Styrofoam balls—I had just learned what Styrofoam was called—and I was excited. However, I was shocked when I arrived at school to find my classroom overcrowded with strange kids and someone sitting at my desk. 

              “Who was this kid, and why was he at my desk?” I wondered. Whoever he was, he was loud and had a lot of friends. While I stood in the doorway, the adult in the room called his name twice to put all four legs of the chair on the floor. I decided to keep my eye on him. I took a seat on the floor close by.

              Before long, I was told to get back in my chair by this unfamiliar adult and to follow the class rules. I was surprised. Someone else was in my desk! However, shy, little me didn’t say anything; I just slumped into an empty chair somewhat close to my desk. I didn’t have the guts to say anything back to this interloper.

              Not even five minutes later, as I was still trying to get my bearings on who all these extra kids were, this old woman with stringy, gray hair was in my face, her glasses slipping from her nose, her finger wagging. “You,” she said. I froze. “And you, and you, and you, and you.” Five of us in all—two other kids from my class, Robert and Shane, two outsiders including the dork at my desk, and me. “I’ve had enough of your misbehavior (another new word for this Kindergarten kid). You will sit out during the planet activity. You are very much in trouble!”

              Gulp.

              I tried to protest her sentence passed for the crime I didn’t commit, but the words stuck in my throat, choked on nervousness and naiveté. I could not summon the courage or the sense to speak up and protest my innocence. She turned away. I was lost. I so sunk into my anxious self that I didn’t even know what the others had done to anger the substitute. Oblivious would probably be the best word to describe the moment.

              The other boys shrugged off the reprimand and continued being obnoxious, ignoring this lady. I, however, had never been in trouble before in school. I didn’t know how to handle it. It wasn’t fair. I hadn’t done anything wrong. I just wanted my desk. I wanted my teacher. I clearly remember shaking and sobbing—quietly, of course--especially after the others had filed out of the room and the lights were clicked off. She left the five of us to our own devices—not a slick move on the sub’s part I soon registered. While the rest of the kids went downstairs to take part in the fun of paint and wires and Styrofoam and who knows what else, I remained stationary in the seat, sniffling. The other four hooligans sneaked out the classroom door, ignoring me completely, leaving me alone in the dark, disheveled classroom. After the group returned, nobody talked to me, nor did I move from my chair until it was time to go home. I never told anybody. I didn’t know how.

              The next morning, not many hours passed before I learned that my bewildering isolation the previous day actually saved me. Ms. Cogwell was back, which lowered my anxieties, but more importantly, Robert and Shane were also conspicuously missing from the morning activities, although I had seen them on the blacktop before the bell rang. Relieved to see some sense of normalcy, I finished my work early (as I usually did), and my teacher granted me time to browse in the small school library—one of my favorite activities at Lil People School.

To reach the library, I had to walk past the principal’s office. As I scurried by, Shane, straight-backed and pale, sat outside the open door on a rickety, wooden folding chair. I slowed. He didn’t say anything, just stared at the wall opposite, his lips quivering. Through the open office door, I spied Robert bent over, receiving the unfriendly end of a paddle. (Yes, it was still legal back then.) Perhaps the most distinct memory of this incident was the crack of wood on backside resonating in the corridor as I scampered a little quicker in hopes of reaching the stacks and disassociating myself from criminal mischief. If I had been associated with the guilty, that could have been my butt being blistered! 

In that collision of space and time, my tiny mind swore not to get in trouble at school. Ever. That paddle put the fear in me. I also knew that if I got into trouble at school, it would be worse at home…and I did not want to find out what that meant.

Since then I knew that because I had no spine, I had to be careful whom I followed. At times, I failed my own advice, but I would like to think that for the most part, this lesson was a fairly easy one for me to learn.


Photo Credits:

https://www.amazon.com/Yonor-Lacquer-Painted-Wooden-Airflow/dp/B07T54TM6K/ref=pd_lpo_201_img_0/131-6054741-4403501?_encoding=UTF8&pd_rd_i=B07T54TM6K&pd_rd_r=699908d6-cc30-4b06-9dce-dcf1cef6c0c8&pd_rd_w=x5z9Y&pd_rd_wg=C0M96&pf_rd_p=7b36d496-f366-4631-94d3-61b87b52511b&pf_rd_r=Z8PM0K5REV2FGHENPWW0&psc=1&refRID=Z8PM0K5REV2FGHENPWW0

https://boyslife.org/hobbies-projects/projects/164781/how-to-make-a-model-of-the-solar-system/

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-04-13/flock-of-sheep/7322538?nw=0

30 November 2016

Catching Air and Almost Dying

Would you look at this! Two days in a row with a new post. I haven't done that since I posted twice in one day last September (2015). Well, this piece is based on something I've never told my mother, a topic I have taken from Jack Prelutsky’s “A Day at the Zoo” found in Guys Write for Guys Read on many occasions. I’ve been using this prompt so long now that it’s getting harder and harder to come up with ideas that Mom doesn’t know about. I’m sure if I could spend a few minutes with my brothers, though, something will spark a memory.
                  My students had been asking about near-death experiences lately, so here's another one...that I don't think Mom knows about unless she's reading this right now.

                  The first time I ever actually thought I was going to die in a car was late one Friday night when I lived on Scott AFB in Illinois. Jon, Steve, and I were driving away from the base, probably headed back to The Coop via Rally’s or Taco Bell or somewhere else for a midnight snack run. I think we had dropped off Josh at his house, or maybe he was with us. I don’t remember. It’s possible Rob or someone else might have been in the back seat, too, but that doesn’t really matter. For some reason, though, we decided to take the back road that ran parallel to the railroad tracks, a route we normally didn’t take that late at night because there were very few lights, or more importantly, no girls cruising up and down like there would have been on the main roads.
                  About a third of the way down that stretch of lonely road, there was a small rise, a short hill or a bump if you will, not quite as steep as a speed bump like you find in a parking lot or highfalutin gated community, but steep nevertheless. Some of you might see where this is going by now.
                  Jon was driving his little Plymouth Sundance, I was riding shotgun, and Steve was spread out in the back seat. Naturally, the tunes were cranked, back left speaker already fuzzing.
                  I’m not sure if Jon meant to hit the bump that fast, or if he just forgot it was there, but at sixty-five miles per hour, there’s not much you can do after impact.
                  We hit. The Sundance launched. Snowboarders would have been awed at the air we caught. And that’s when time slowed down and eyes bulged in their sockets.
                  Sparks flew upon landing, the underside scraping the hard pot hole riddled asphalt. We jolted twice. Then spun. Counter-clockwise. Once, twice, three, four times. We jerked to a stop in a ditch. The seatbelts had held fast.
                  Tightness in my chest. Breathing suspended. I looked out the window to my right. A cement power pole stood a literal inch on the other side of the glass.
                  The CD must have ended because I only remember silence. The only noise came from my heart trying to thump through my rib cage. Breathing resumed. The three of us looked at each other. Jon put the car in reverse and backed out. We stopped again on the road and jumped out. We circled the car wordlessly, inspecting for crumpled metal or jacked-up fenders. No damage—a miracle—just a little mud and grass clumped into the tire treads.
                  Still without speaking, we climbed back in, I turned back on the music, and we drove silently on. I don’t even think we stopped for food. It wasn’t until later that night that any of us dared speak about what had just almost happened. And being the intelligent teenage morons we were, we later went looking for safer places to jump the car.

P.S. If anyone reading this has a picture of this car, I'd like to have a copy. I can't find any in my stash despite how much we lived in it (and a few choice others).


07 April 2011

A Personal Ramble about a Certain Dilemma

This feels good. I’m having my students write, and I actually get a moment to write by myself. Of course, these seventh graders need more steerage than my ninth grade lackeys, so this will probably be short. This class of 24 boys (and four girls) seems to open up more whenever I have them write about personal experiences, especially ones that involve injury, flatulence, or some type of other general grossness. Last week they practiced taking notes from Oh, Yuck! The Encyclopedia of Everything Nasty by Joy Masoff. They then had to reconstitute an article from their notes and did a great, disgusting job writing about farts, pee, and vomit.

Today’s prompt came from Bruce Hale’s “Boys, Beer, Barf, and Bonding” found in Guys Write for Guys Read. When I pulled out the book to read the selection, one of my boys whispered, “All right! It’s the cool ‘guy’ book!” I smiled.

Yes, it was one of the cool guy books, and one of the many prompts that I’d like to use on a regular basis in the future. I stand at a crossroads in my classroom. I can keep going along the same path I have trodden for eleven years, or I can blaze a new trail and incorporate the additional writing that I know the students need, the additional writing that I want to do. Sounds like a no-brainer, right? I wish. Teaching writing, just like actually writing, is hard work. Now, I’m not talking about assigning writing—that’s the easy part—but actually spending the time with the students to help them learn the art and the science behind writing well. Not that I’m the expert, but I do have the passion. Again, it’s no question what I should do, right? There’s this little thing called the doctorate program that I’m trying to manage as well. It’s completely kicking my butt, and I’m a glutton for punishment, I know. I’ve heard all the sado-masochistic comments before.

Truth be told: I know where I want my students to be with their writing. I know that this degree will help me get to where I want to be—teaching prospective English teachers how to teach writing—so that passion for writing well can be spread. But! I have to make a living. Working two jobs and going to school is no piece of cake, although a slice of German chocolate with coconut pecan frosting sounds yummy right now.

Looking back over my ramble here, I know what I need to do, and I suppose I’ve known it all along. I’m just a big, fat, yellow, non-San Diego chicken. ‘Nuff said.

So…

I’m doing it. Next year is going to be a structured writing workshop with literature scattered throughout the year. But it will all come back to writing.

But I need some help. That’s where you come in, my few readers. I’m looking for good mentor texts, writing prompts, “real-life” writing applications. Please feel free to flood my post with comments. Usually, when I say this, nothing happens, but I’m going to exercise some faith in my fellow teachers and writers and friends out there.

P.S. I’ll share a few ideas for engaging literature-based writing prompts in my next post.

13 December 2010

Really Reading

Tonight I am grateful for the ability to read. No, I don't just mean the fact that I can decipher words and comprehend a text. I'm talking about my ability to really read, to escape into a story (I'm done with textbooks for a few weeks), become part of the journey, and hang on for the ride. I'm grateful for my mother who read to me, for my wife who still reads aloud with me, and for my kids who let me read to and with them. No one is too old to be read aloud to. Just ask all my geeky writer friends.

I love the time I have to read aloud to my students--books that some of them would never dream of picking up, let alone making past page two. I read for them.

But now that my semester is done, I can read for me, and I've been enjoying it. I picked up Funny Business, the first installment of the Guys Read Library, edited by Jon Scieszka. I love short story collections, but today during silent reading, I was devouring David Lubar's "Kid Appeal," and I laughed out loud. Hard. Long. Enough to get stares from my 7th graders. One girl rolled her eyes, tilted her head, and looked at me. "Wha-at?" she snarled. I tried to explain how funny the book was (without disrupting the rest of the class), but all I got in return was an exasperated "unh" and a head shake, as if anyone could ever laugh at a bo-ok, Mr. Anson. She wasn't even trying to fake her way across the pages of Diary of a Wimpy Kid.

So I am grateful that I am able to uncover such pleasures in reading. I do laugh aloud. I do cry. I do need to find out what happens next. I do stay up way past the time all the stupid little vampires return to their beds...doing what...reading: enjoying life experiences, sharing the joy of living with those who can tell it best.

P.S. Most of the other students are begging for me to read it to them tomorrow.

09 September 2010

What's the Deal?

This was based on "Guy Things" by Gordon Korman (found in Guys Write for Guys Read), a writing prompt I gave to my 9th graders today.

Cartoons—unfortunately there don’t seem to be any good ones any more. True, the media is trying to bring some of them back, like Scooby Doo or Tom and Jerry, but they are ruined. I mean, who ever heard of a cat and mouse being friends? The funniest elements of the cartoons have been eliminated—the insane violence. Cats are supposed to have nine lives, right? But any intelligent kid knows that cartoon cats have about 9 million. And in each episode they should lose a dozen or so—in the most bizarre, humiliating, painful ways imaginable. Look at it now. Nothing. Maybe Tom catches a golf club in the mouth every once in a while, but it’s more of an actual plot now…a story where the characters cooperate. What’s that all about? Kids have to deal with appropriate behavior in real life. Cartoons are meant to be an escape from reality. It’s not a classroom, but a fantasy where anything can happen. We all know that the worlds are separate. Those quacks who truly believe that cartoon violence leads to actual violence have been watching too much Roger Rabbit and not enough Looney Toons. The more outlandish the slapstick, the more we kids enjoy these cartoons because they’re NOT real.
I think I'll post a little writing every so often...some polished...some rough. And I welcome any comments or criticisms or cupcakes you care to throw my way.