| From
the September/October 2008 issue of The Horn Book Magazine
Teachers I Remember
BY ROBIN SMITH
lthough
I love to write about books, I am a teacher, not a writer. My favorite
writers create worlds out of their imaginations; what I try to create,
every August, is a new community of children, one I hope will be
strong enough to make it through the school year. Secretly, I have
another hope: I hope the children will remember second grade as
one of their best years. I hope they will remember me the way I
remember my teachers — those from my childhood and those who
come alive in the books I love.
Each year, right before school starts, I organize
my classroom library, pulling out the chapter books I like to read
to the class during the year and finding the picture books I use
during the crucial first weeks when my students and I are settling
in. What kinds of books am I drawn to? My favorites are books about
school. You would think I would be sick of them, especially since
some are schlocky and idealistic — impossible to live up to
— but you would be wrong. Books about school give me some
common ground with my class to talk about my expectations for the
year. Though fictional, the teachers in these books inform my teaching
every day.
Most books about kids are books about school. That
makes sense. Unless they’re homeschooled, most children spend
a significant chunk of their waking hours in school. They wait in
line, master the vocabulary of lockers and cubbies and boys’
rooms and girls’ rooms, and learn to live in a world where
paid adults are in charge. These paid adults become very important
— a bad teacher means a bad year, and a beloved teacher can
make school a warm second home.
I fall in love with the good teachers in books
(and, really, there are few bad teachers in books for young elementary
students), especially when I share their stories aloud with my students.
From wise Miss Mason in The Hundred Dresses to Gloria Houston’s
unattainably sweet role model in My Great-Aunt Arizona
to the three marvelous preschool teachers in Rebecca Caudill’s
Did You Carry the Flag Today, Charley?, they are all teachers
I wish I could be. I often ask myself (thinking of Esmé Raji
Codell’s Sahara Special), “What would Miss
Pointy do?”
Kirkpatrick Hill’s Miss Agnes poured me a
cup of tea and captured my imagination eight years ago. In The
Year of Miss Agnes, set in post-WWII rural Alaska, Miss Agnes
teaches a group of kids in a one-room schoolhouse. The children
have run off a long line of inexperienced and culturally insensitive
teachers and are in danger of losing their school forever when she
arrives. Miss Agnes might have a British accent and she might wear
pants, but she loves children and is up to the challenge of this
little school on the brink. Dumping the out-of-date readers and
textbooks, she cleans out the classroom with a firm and no-nonsense
hand and gets down to the business of teaching. Every year, I steal
ideas from this teacher who only exists on paper. This year, I created
personal spelling dictionaries for each student, imagining Miss
Agnes giving me the nod. I have added historical timelines to my
classroom, and I always have a map or globe handy, just as she does.
Urban Nashville is far from rural Alaska, but my new readers love
it when I write personal stories to them (as Miss Agnes does when
she creates little books for her students). And whenever I get discouraged,
I think of Miss Agnes, staying past her contracted time to be with
the students who love her. I envy Miss Agnes. Her one-room schoolhouse
students don’t have to move on to a new teacher at the end
of the year. I like to imagine her teaching that same group —
and then their children — for years to come.
This year, a new teacher joined the pantheon of
beloved teachers who populate my own personal Mount Olympus: Miss
D., from Andrea Cheng’s Where the Steps Were. She
teaches in an old inner-city school that is about to be shut down.
She listens to her children, who face a variety of struggles, while
the clock keeps ticking closer to the end of the year and the end
of their community. Though Miss D. reveals some of her personal
struggles to her students, the students are the center of her school
life, and they know it. Miss D. loves poetry and stories and introduces
her children to literature, from Stone Soup and A Chair
for My Mother to Langston Hughes’s “Dreams”
and “Merry-Go-Round” and Eloise Greenfield’s “Harriet
Tubman.” Ding! I rededicate myself to morning poetry reading
when I see my own students seek out and react to the poems Miss
D. references. Like Miss Agnes’s children, Miss D.’s
third graders form a bond with one another that will endure well
past the demolition of their school, and my students bonded with
them, too. They wanted to count change, make scratch paintings,
and cook school soup the way those kids did. And, at the end of
the year, they wanted me to read those poems, one more time.
Sara Pennypacker’s Clementine is another
new character on the scene. She is undoubtedly the star of her series,
but I am weirdly drawn to her teacher Mr. D’Matz and principal
Mrs. Rice, who spend their days with this active, impulsive third
grader. Mr. D’Matz respects Clementine’s need for space
without allowing her to fall through the cracks. In the latest series
entry, Clementine’s Letter, he has ingeniously worked
out secret signals with Clementine so he doesn’t need to embarrass
her in front of the whole class. (I think I will adopt his tugging-on-an-ear
gesture that means “Time to Be Listening.”) Clementine
is the kind of student some teachers would dread, but when Clementine
sees herself through Mr. D’Matz’s eyes, she likes what
she sees and wants to make him proud. I like that image a lot.
The only problem with school stories is that there
are just so darn many of them. The ones I remember best are the
ones I share with my students. But there are so many more —
Andrew Clements’s Frindle, The Jacket, The
School Story, The Janitor’s Boy, and The
Landry News, plus his Jake Drake books; Susie Morgenstern’s
hilarious and moving A Book of Coupons and It Happened
at School (not to mention her older, wonderful Secret Letters
from 0 to 10). I allow my eye to wander over to my current
stack of books to read. Half are about school. I wonder which ones
will sneak into my brain the way that Bel Kaufman’s Up
the Down Staircase, Pat Conroy’s The Water Is Wide,
and Sylvia Ashton-Warner’s Teacher did so many years
ago, back when I was trying to decide what I would do with my life.
Robin
Smith teaches second grade at the Ensworth School in Nashville,
Tennessee. |
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From the September/October
2008 issue of The Horn Book Magazine

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