One of my January posts was entitled “Canary in the Coal Mine” and I wrote this:
Kids are the canaries in the coal mine, warning us of the dangers of imminent cultural collapse. That expression comes from coal miners using caged birds to detect toxic gases like carbon monoxide in mines. Due to their high sensitivity to fumes, the birds would stop singing and die, a signal for the miners to evacuate. Immersed in the toxic fumes of our poisonous cultural practices and the narratives that sustain them, the children have stopped singing the delights of childhood. Instead, they shout or scream or hit or remain mute and we guardians have run out the door and left them alone.
Today I read this on a Facebook post:
Hi everyone. Is anyone at their wits end with behaviors? I feel very defeated at my school. For context:
I have been at my school for 5 years. I have what I believe to be good classroom management skills and have built great relationships with the kids, teachers, and administrators. I teach in a high-needs title 1 school with mostly Latino students and I am very attuned to their needs right now because many are getting their parents taken away from them without notice due to the kidnappings that are happening (not going to argue with anyone on that).
I have taken level 1 Orff training and feel confident in my lesson plans, but I feel so defeated right now because the behaviors are what I describe as "death by a thousand paper cuts". The disrespect is at an all-time high, the kids are talking back, disengaged, disruptive, and i am not feeling the joy in teaching anymore. I went from being teacher of the year last year to feeling like scrolling through ziprecruiter to look for a new job.
Yesterday I was trying to teach a piece and I had kids throwing mallets and hitting the xylophones aggressively. At one point I just had them return everything and line up early.
I've contacted parents and have told admin and nothing changes. I have to stay at a title 1 school for 5 more years for my loan forgiveness, but I am at my wits end. I literally had a second grader tell another kid to suck his ba***. I've had kids steal from my desk and have had to put stop signs around my area because they don’t respect my space.
I don’t feel supported by admin because they don’t want to be called for every little thing (and I don’t call for help most of the time) but it’s chipping away at my mental health. I also can’t take a mental health day because I was on maternity leave last year and have to save up my hours for maternity leave again for next year.
Do I just give them worksheets or give half the kids worksheets and let the other kids play the instruments? I feel like I’ll just be managing the worksheet kids and won’t be able to fully engage in the few kids who do respect and are able to have some self-control. I feel so stuck between showing empathy for their trauma (I’ve lived through losing family friends due to deportations) or do I bring down the hammer and be a robot music teacher who lets the screen teach for me?
If any of y’all have any advice or are in the trenches like me, please let me know.
And so I wrote back:
These are deep issues that can use live discussion, so feel free to call me if you like. Meanwhile, a few thoughts:
1) "Behavior is the language of children." What are they trying to tell adults that they don't have the language for? Seems clear that they are the canaries in the coal mine showing us what a threatening environment we adults have created for them. So this is not business as usual and not to be fixed by classroom management techniques.
2) Given that, perhaps take one class where all write on a piece of paper (or if they can't write, find a time for them to dictate to you in private)what is hardest in their life right now and how someone can help them. Put all the answers in a bowl and mix them up and have each kid pick one out at random and read out loud, without any comments. if the truth comes out and the kids realize they're not alone in their suffering, then ask the group, "What can we do to help each other feel and be better?"
3) Follow the example of the brilliant Orff teacher Tom Pierre, who stopped his class in the middle and called up one of the kids' parents. When the father answered and Tom introduced himself as his daughter's teacher, the father sighed and said, "What has she done now?" Tom's answer? "She just sang one of the most beautiful solos I've heard in a long time and we all got goosebumps. Just want to make sure you know what an amazing daughter you've raised!" Can you feel how that changed everything? So next time a kid does something lovely in your class, try it. Call up their parents in front of the other kids and praise them. I think it can help turn the energy around when kids realize it's better to do things well than the opposite.
4) Do the number 2 exercise with the staff and admin with the prompt, "What's the hardest thing about teaching for you right now? How can we help?" Read them out loud and again, when people realize they're all in it together, use your human intelligence and compassion to figure out together how to turn this around. Hint: None of the above is business as usual. The entire country is in a war zone and we need a radical revisioning of how to be with each other in all our communities. School is an important place to start.
And whatever you do, do not capitulate to robot teaching and stick kids in front of screens!!!!
As this entire Blog testifies, my experience with kids has been, and continues to be, overwhelmingly positive. But I believe that the above stories are true and are asking us to radically re-envision the entire enterprise of schooling. That’s the opportunity that the classroom challenges are offering to us. Not only in our schools, but in the greater civic and political sphere. The consequences of encroaching fascism reach everywhere, releasing their toxic fumes into every nook and cranny of the coal mine. The work ahead is in every sphere of our life and in every hour of every day. And again I can testify that in the midst of battering storms, the rainbow can appear and the canaries sing.