Tuesday, October 12, 2010

60 Second Teacher Stories By Cal - The Pumpkin Carving Contest


I always loved this time of year as a teacher. Things would just be humming along in the classroom so I had time to poke my head up and see what everyone else was doing. This inevitably lead to observations of the new teachers.

They are always a funny group. All that enthusiasm and a belief that they could re-invent the wheel. You wait for that day when they realize that they will never actually be able to ever 'herd the cats' but they can get them to come if they run the can opener at the right moment.

They also volunteer for everything not knowing that all the marking and planning will be overwhelming enough. No wonder the sports teams never do well. Coach numnut doesn't even know the rules of volleyball, let alone how to coach that sport.

For me the most fascinating thing to watch were the school assemblies that were organized to build some kind of school spirit. These are usually run over the lunch hour and all the kids just mill around looking to cause some sort of mischief while an over enthusiastic newbie tries to keep their attention for more than 30 seconds.

There was a first year teacher that I knew once who I thought was different than all that. She was always bright and cheery and was willing to listen to more experienced educators around her. She asked lots of questions and worked hard - first one there in the morning and last one to leave at night. We all had big hope for her.

She even volunteered to run the 'House League' for the month of October despite the fact that we tried to persuade her to choose a month later in the year. She, however, was determined to prove herself.

Now the 'House League' is a way of keeping kids in line and building spirit. Each kid is divided up into one of four groups...each with their own color and name. Throughout the year the group gets points for doing good works or volunteering or winning contests throughout the year. They lose points for skipping class or being late or being sent to the Principal's office.

At the end of the year the winning group got a big bbq lunch put on for them by the PTA and the local firehouse, plus a ribbon of achievment.

Since it was October, this teacher thought that a pumpkin carving contest would be a great idea. Jr. high kids would be divided up into teams of two and each house would have four pumpkins that they had to carve. The staff would then vote on which pumpkins were the best by dropping their vote tickets into the pumpkins of their choice. She even designed the vote tickets special on the computer and printed them out on orange paper - oooooo.

I am sure she had visions of pumpkins like the one's pictured about providing the mood lighting at the Halloween dance.

I had to admit it was a great idea. Creativity, team rivalry, secret voting (except for her and another newbie, every other staff member was barred from the event lest we show favoritism to one color or team) and excited students who would all be on the edge of their seats waiting to learn who was the winner once the votes were counted. After all, there were free tickets to the dance and bags of candy to be won. Motivation was high.

She just messed up in one tiny way. She made it a SPEED event.

I still remember the screams of the students as they ran from the gym in a panic followed close behind by participants with shirts rapped around their fingers - shirts stained with blood. There was blood everywhere, on the pumpkins, on the gym floor, on the newbies, on the carvers, on other kids. It was a freakin' horror show.

Despite the fact that only 3 kids cut themselves badly enough to be taken to the hospital, the rumors grew. By the next day it was believed that half the kids had died from getting their throats cut or from being stabbed. Emergency parent/teacher conference. Gotta love the grapevine.

Of course the newbie was terrorized over what had happened. If she had known about it, I am sure she could have gotten worker's compensation for her post traumatic stress disorder. This was her Vietnam. She was never quite the same after that. Any event from then on had to be heavily vetted lest we actually kill a kid the next time.

She might have recovered and lasted the year if it wasn't for the 'snake incident' but that is a story for another time.

14 comments:

Chase March said...

I love your teaching stories!

It's tough being a teacher and sometimes the best ideas don't quite work out. We all know that from experience. Although, this doesn't sound like it was such a good one.

Copyboy said...

Man that is some sick grapevine. Wow, what you teachers go through.

Wings1295 said...

Hah - Now that is the stuff urban legends are born from!

Rawknrobyn.blogspot.com said...

"Her Vietnam" - very funny Cal. I can't say I feel too sorry for her, because it was a freakin' stupid idea!
xoRobyn

Rek Sesh said...

And we take teachers for granted, never seeing the 'behind the scenes'.
love most of the stuff, a little lazy to comment on everything...so here goes...meow mix never fails to make me smile, lovely quotes specially the one on God,liked the astronaut chronicles , the Herr Donut one, and very mean of you to show such tantalising desserts... :)

The Invisible Seductress said...

I laughed, but then I felt bad...


;}

Kal said...

Chase - it was bad on paper to begin with but she told no one so we couldn't stop the carnage.

Kal said...

Look at you songsnswords - becoming a regular here.

sambo said...

This Entry
Is Why You Have The Most Entertaining Blog
Noticed
You Have More Than 10 Always Comments
Ask And You Shall Receive
-Damn Dude, BEST BLOG

Kal said...

Sambo - you are going to give me a sense of entitlement and I will start believing that I need to be nominated for some big time reward or get that book deal where they reprint all my posts in a large book that people can read on the toilet.

sambo said...

If You Keep This Entertainment Up
This Will Be More Than You Imagined
Not Toilet Book Reading
Ever Hear Of Bill Watterson?
It's Up To You
-Sam

Ricky Shambles said...

Well-told post! Thank you.

Ah, Halloween. Always reminds me of that one pseudo lesson about the linguistic history of the holiday that I taught my only year of teaching and getting called into the principal's office because a parent had called in because I was "teaching witchcraft." Incidentally, that was one more parent than showed up at the open house to meet me.

But I already said something about that today in a comment elsewhere, so here's my favorite teaching bit:

On make-up picture day, one of my students came into class late, but with a note. It was from the photographer: "Judy was gettin her pitcher taken."

(I taught in NC in a county with ONE HS for the entire county.)

I still have the note and will one day post it at CFC.

Kal said...

Gettting a note like that would be hilarious. I love the bad spelling. Once I thought it was the kid just trying to con me but then I met the parents who made the kid look like a genius. Come to think of it I lent them my air dryer thing that let you make great beef jerky and I never got it back. Damn them. Now I want some deer jerky.

BTW - I got the same 'witchcraft' b.s when I read the first Harry Potter book to the kids (took 6 months worth to get through it but it was such a cool experience for all of us) and I got the same complaints. I just ignored them and figured that if the kids didn't feel indoctrinated into the dark side then the parents could just suck on it.

Pat Tillett said...

Wow!
And that is how legends are born. What a great story! I love your 60 second stories....keep 'em coming!