Today is Kara's first day of substitute teaching. She started a graduate degree in education recently and decided to get out of the bank world and into the classroom.
As she left this morning, I was reminded of my one-year stint as a substitute school teacher in the Metro Nashville Public School System while I was finishing seminary. Nashville Public Schools is an interesting outfit. The overwhelming majority of students are minorities for, unlike Metro Detroit for instance, most of the white kids in
Laotian. Hispanic. Kurdish. Black. These were the four major groups I interacted with the year I taught in
These kids are bussed all over the city, to sit in the classrooms which used to be filled with the more affluent white children. When Jim Crow Segregation fell in the South, the complexion of the school system changed. Some say Jim Crow didn't die; Jim Crow just went under-ground.
I will never forget one of my first teaching experiences in MNPS.
I reported to an elementary school on the east side of town in a well known Hispanic- Latino section. I was to teach First Grade.
I reported early (I frequently left our apartment early for fear that the engine in my Dodge would overheat, leaving me stranded and unable to get to the minimal paying job) and began to take attendance. These kids were shy. More so than most six and seven-year-olds.
We stumbled through the beginning, the Pledge, and the morning story-time. Late in the morning, I took the students to music class. One of teachers struck up small talk with me.
"So, how's the morning going so far?"
"Pretty good," I said mustering the most bravado one could hope for in light of the fact that as a substitute, I was a recognized, ordained, labeled Outsider.
"So, do you speak Spanish?"
"Me? No. I ummm . . . I had four years of French. No Spanish though."
"Wow. How are you connecting with the kids? You do know that it's an ESL class?"
In that moment, I ran the call letters E-S-L through my head a dozen times. ESL, ESL, ESL . . . I know that code. It's code for . . . oh my . . . it's code for English as a Second Language. My face must have turned into the same face I make when I drink sour milk.
"Oh, sure. It's a little difficult but were managing," I whispered with a lump in my throat.
Immediately, I turned around, walked back to my classroom. It turned out that I was "teaching" (if you could call it that) a class with students who barely, if at all, spoke English. No wonder I'd received large smiles and blank stares the entire morning.
Oh mon dieu. Que pasa?
6 comments:
My wife, who is entering her eleventh year as a Special Education Teacher, spent four years teaching in inner-city Memphis City Schools. Her experience is very similar.
Your wife will find her new vocation very stressful at times BUT VERR REWARDING when she sees the impact that a Christian can have when they view their vocation as a calling and not just a job. God bless her in her choice.
-Rex
haha. that is still so funny to me. Now that I am home from the first day though, I think my day could possibly top yours.
Great story.
I'm sure you pulled out some Barth and Tillich and offered it in your Spanish to your listeners.
i lol'd
Kara - good job! You need to tell everyone - you started with 21 Kindergarteners (I think) at the beginning of the day - and ended up with 17 at the end! Sweet little Kara, so kind and quiet - but don't cross her in a classroom 'cuz she'll set you straight in a hurry!
Congratulations kiddo!
Lynda S.
Kara, God bless you for going into this vocation. My sons have always gone to public school and we are always grateful for the Christian teachers that they have encountered along the way. I want my sons to know how to be in the world without conforming to the world. The Christian teachers we have encountered have done just that and are able to help them along the way.
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