Hold the Bus!
by
Linda
Schrock Taylor
by Linda Schrock Taylor
Last week I
received my bonus for teaching this year. I know that most
teachers work for financial rewards, as I most certainly do, as
well. However, my spirit seeks additional payment in forms other
than monetary.
My spirit seeks
approval; encouragement; the chance to share my skills with other
teachers. Even better than these things, is proof, subtle or obvious,
that my students have changed in response to my teaching or modeling.
Sometimes I am lucky enough to notice new ways in which my students
view or respond to the world around them.
Last week…the
weather was fine and my students and I were ready to travel, with
a couple hundred other 5th and 6th graders,
to a distant town where we would attend a Disney On Ice show.
The night before I had "played mother" and shopped for snacks and
beverages, which I packed and brought along for my charges.
At last everyone
was seated on the correct bus and we were ready to leave the school
– backpacks, coolers, and picnic baskets loaded. The drivers of
the several busses started the engines just as I muttered to myself,
"Darn! I forgot my book."
(Now, I have
often explained to my students how much I hate to go anyplace
without a book for I cannot stand to waste time when I could have
been reading. I did not think they had even been listening. Was
I ever wrong!)
I did not even
realize that my comment was audible until two students immediately
started to wail, "I forgot my book, too!!" Before I could stop them,
they leaped to their feet, and rushed off the bus, heading into
the school. I decided to follow and get my book, also, for by the
time I could catch them and order them back to the bus – we could
have our books!
Zoom! They
ran into the building and headed in different directions – one to
a locker and one to my classroom. That was soon followed by a dead
run back to the bus. Whew! We had made it! The busses began pulling
out.
I had just
regained my seat when the Harry Potter reader began chewing
out those kids who had stayed behind, "Why didn't YOU go
get a book?! You know it's a shame to spend time staring into space,
when you could very well be reading a good book. How can you just
sit and do nothing?!"
My heart almost
burst with pride to hear a former non-reader chastise mentally lazy
classmates.
Ka-ching! Ka-chang!
Account – PAID IN FULL.
April
22, 2006
Linda
Schrock Taylor [send
her mail] is an educational
consultant, homeschooling mom, and public school special ed teacher.
She is available for presentations, inservices, and workshops.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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