Category Archives: teaching in ohio

Thank you, Ms. Ferguson, wherever you are!

i was talking with my friend mark a while back about teaching and teachers who made a difference in our lives. many days are spent at my school feeling as though i’m just a rule-machine, looking for someone to step out of line so that i can squash them with my evil consequences. we talked about those kids who are changed for the good despite how we feel we are (ineffective) as teachers.

one teacher in particular who changed my life was my sophomore english teacher at amelia high school: ms. ferguson.

i wasn’t a good student and wasn’t having a good time in high school up to this point. i had been in the hospital for a year and had to re-take my freshman year, was frustrated and bounced between feeling too smart or too stupid in my classes. i didn’t have good study habits, didn’t want to do the work, and generally made things difficult for my teachers.

enter ms. ferguson, charged with the unenviable task of teaching the classics to 15 year olds. we trounced into her class and awaited the harrowing first day’s torture.

and it never came.

oh, sure – we had to read the classics (great expectations, tale of two cities, red badge of courage, etc.) but ms. ferguson had a gift… she was excited to be with us. she was excited to teach. she looked forward to having us in her class.

she acted. she gestured. she smiled. she frowned. she recited. she danced. she articulated.

she put on mini-plays while reading to us, acting all of the parts, standing on chairs and putting on dramatic airs as she went. she roamed around the room. she called on us even as we hid behind whatever we could find. she dragged us kicking and screaming into seeing that the classics didn’t have to suck.

but what convinced me of ms. ferguson’s coolness was this:

she made us do writing journals. three times a week we had to turn in our journals to her and she would write back to us, make comments, or sometimes just left them blank. we were allowed to write anything we wanted to, as long as we wrote something. some students wrote directly to her. others wrote stories or poems or observations.

i don’t remember much about what i wrote, but i do remember HATING this part of the class. i didn’t know what to write!! i HATED to write!! my hand cramped up, i was embarrassed to let someone else read my crappy writing, i felt stupid – it was an awful thing!

one day early in that semester during study hall, i realized that i forgot to write in my journal and it was due the next period. panic set in and my stomach clenched as i thought about how i could get out of turning the notebook in.

but then.

then i thought, “hey! just write some song lyrics in there and she won’t know any better!”

so i decided to write out pink floyd’s “two suns in the sunset” lyrics from the final cut album. it was a favorite of mine, despite the album itself not being one of their better ones.

In my rear view mirror the sun is going down
Sinking behind bridges in the road
And I think of all the good things
That we have left undone
And I suffer premonitions
Confirm suspicions
Of the holocaust to come.

The rusty wire that holds the cork
That keeps the anger in
Gives way
And suddenly it’s day again.
The sun is in the east
Even though the day is done.
Two suns in the sunset
Hmmmmmmmmmm
Could be the human race is run.

Like the moment when the brakes lock
And you slide towards the big truck
You stretch the frozen moments with your fear.
And you’ll never hear their voices
And you’ll never see their faces
You’ll have no recourse to the law anymore.

And as the windshield melts
And my tears evaporate
Leaving only charcoal to defend.
Finally I understand the feelings of the few.
Ashes and diamonds
Foe and friend
We were all equal in the end.

well, i quickly scribbled these lyrics out just in time for the bell to ring. immensely proud of myself for having beaten my teacher in her attempt to force me to write original things, i turned in my notebook and enjoyed the rest of the class.

and the next day – oh. my. god. i’ll never forget it as long as i live.

ms. ferguson hands us our writing journals back and i flip to the page with the lyrics written on them and there’s only one thing written there: Hmmmmmmmmmm… it was about half way down the page and she’d drawn a line between two of the lines in the song, pointing to her comment.

i had forgotten to include the humming part of the song.

and ms. ferguson liked pink floyd.

and. she. caught. me.

and i was both mortified and awestruck. i fell in love with ms. ferguson that day – not just because she liked pink floyd, but because i saw her as an individual who enjoyed what she did. she cared about us. she wasn’t trying to “catch us” writing someone else’s stuff – she wanted us to get used to the process of writing. she wanted us to enjoy writing and see what powerful change can be exacted by writing. she wanted us to read the classics and see what those old dusty books with their archaic words and structure told us today not just bygone days.

i fell in love with more than just ms. ferguson that semester: i fell deeper in love with reading and i fell deeper in love with writing – things that have stuck with me 24 years later. and now i teach English at the high school level, too. and yes: i torture my students with writing journals, too.

thanks, ms. ferguson – you rock.

the elusive second snow day

chris_elliott_snow_day_001.jpgA couple years ago when we had some time one weekend, lise drove up to blockbuster to grab us a movie. now, we had seen a LOT of movies around this time, so you know how this goes: you hit blockbuster, walk around 15 times and realize you’ve seen almost everything…

except that one. the one you swore you wouldn’t rent unless it were the only one left.

and now. it is.

lise comes home with a movie called Snow Day, and by golly, i knew we were in trouble from the get-go when all the previews were children’s movies. then. then the main feature comes on and it’s a friggin nickelodeon film – holy crap.

chris elliott. chevy chase. a bunch of has-been actors. and no-names – oh, goodness, were there no-name actors! did i think it was going to suck? haha – DID I?

and for the next 90 minutes, we laughed our BUTTS off! it was SO STUPID and SO FUNNY! chris elliott playing snowplowman, the dude who can screw your chances of getting a second snow day – oh, it’s PRICELESS.

so today, in honor of our wonderful snow day, we watched it. and laughed.

and now, we’re in pursuit of “the elusive second snow day” – i wonder who snowplowman is in princeton city school district….

why i’m in special education

i’ve worked in one form of special ed or another for almost 16 years now. as i started at a new school 2 weeks ago, i met a number of new folks and we swapped stories about why we’re in special ed.

i’ve found over those years that many of us have “a story” – a neighbor was handicapped; a brother or sister was disabled; a student in high school had down’s syndrome; a deaf man/woman used to come into a place where they worked – you get the picture.

i hadn’t thought about it for a while: why am i so in love with special ed?

and then i remembered.

17 years ago, i was a student at the University of Cincinnati looking at getting into economics. i wasn’t a very good student (and wasn’t particularly business-minded) so i bounced around in different classes. i started taking a sign language class and learned a lot more about my hearing impairment – it was pretty intriguing! i had no idea about a lot of this stuff, so learning about why i had problems with this or that – pretty cool!

my last semester at UC i decided to take an introduction to special education course just to see what i could learn – mainly about deafness and deaf education. through the course of this 10 week class, we had to take 3 field trips to different schools or organizations that provided services to the disabled.

this was where my life changed.

i don’t recall much about the class. the professor was cool. the information was interesting. but the first two field trips were not memorable.

the third one? hah!

my class met at this residential school here in town and were taken through by one of the administrators of the school. she walked us through the classrooms, explained their mission, explained how they work with the students, explained that many of the children there were unable to help themselves at all – profoundly retarded, in other words. many of the children who were there were lying on mats and could not even roll over or know we were in the room.

we came through one room and a number of students were lying on mats while the teacher worked individually with them. as we listened to the administrator telling us about the kids, one kid stood out.

he’s maybe six years old. he’s blind. he’s deaf. he can’t walk or talk. he has only enough brain matter to keep him breathing and his heart beating. if you held a flashlight up to his head, his head would glow because there’s nothing but fluid in there. in essesnce: this kid had no life – it was meaningless! he was a vegetable! what good could it possibly be to keep a kid like this alive? what’s the point?

and then i noticed the t-shirt he had on. it said:

I’m Mary’s!
KEEP OFF!

so we’re about to move along and i couldn’t resist.”wait! what does the t-shirt mean? who’s mary and how is he hers?”"oh! well, mary is one of the nurses here. if anyone other than mary picks him up or tries to work with him, he screams and cries and won’t let them do a thing to him! but if mary picks him up, he smiles and lets her do what she wants.”

well, this was an epiphany!

“you mean to tell me that this kid: blind, deaf, no brain, a vegetable: he can tell who mary is? he reacts to that? HOW??”

“we’re not sure. that’s just him and he knows the difference!”

that was a life-changing experience. here’s a kid that 5 minutes before i had written off as a vegetable – and he’s got a FAVORITE NURSE!! haha!! NO WAY!!! i was completely floored. he had a personality. he reacted to the things around him. he DID have meaning! he IS valuable! he’s mary’s and by golly, when mary has him he’s happy. content. joy is experienced, even if only in short bursts and in ways we’d never understand.
my class left that school a while later and of the fifteen students, thirteen of them were overwhelmed with disgust and revulsion. one girl said she felt like throwing up after being in there.

one other guy and i were spinning like tops – that was the most amazing thing i had ever seen!

very soon after that i got a job working with profoundly handicapped pre-schoolers over in Northern KY and i LOVED it. when we moved to washington dc, i started working with learning disabled deaf students at Gallaudet University. then it was the national children’s center in NW D.C. working with autistic kids (multiply handicapped, little communication abilities, violently aggressive, severely retarded) for five years. then it was marley glen special school in baltimore, maryland working with autistic kids again for two more years.

even as we moved back to cincinnati for me to get my degree in youth ministry, in the back of my mind i wondered if i was making a mistake.

i’ve been VERY lucky! the two greatest jobs in the world, and i’ve done them both! special ed! youth ministry! i did both at the same time for 10 years!! i mean, who gets this lucky when it comes to jobs??

so now that i’ve left youth ministry as a profession, i’m back in school getting my M Ed. in special education at xavier university, working for princeton city schools working with another group of special ed kids and loving it!

i’m one lucky dude.

whatever happened to that kid on the mat who had no brain, belonged to mary, experienced joy and changed my life?

i dunno. but i love him still.