Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Starting the Marathon with a Sprint


Full disclosure – I know next to nothing about running.  I am not, nor have I ever been, a runner.  While my daughter was on the track and field team in high school, she pursued pole vaulting.  Sitting in the required annual meeting for parents of pole vaulters while they describe the possible injuries and/or death possible from this sport is a whole other level of parental hell, but it sheds no light on running.  Yet, despite all of my lack of knowledge of the sport, even I know that you should not start a marathon by sprinting. 



But each year that seems to be exactly what teachers do.  Ask a teacher to describe how they are feeling right before the kids come back and you are sure to hear the word “exhausted”.   Yes, excited, hopeful, nervous, and other words are used too, but I have found the common feeling was exhausted.  I expected to feel that way my first year of teaching, was surprised that it was still going on around year seven, and a little sad that in year fourteen this still hasn’t changed.  Like many of you, I’ve heard the explanations:  teachers have the whole summer off, plus all those holidays and are just lazy; districts can’t share all the changes, new programs, teaching assignments, etc. until right before school starts because …; if you were more organized, less type-A, more flexible, more demanding, less organized, more type-A, less flexible … you get the point. 

Maybe the question needs to move from why this is happening to how can we handle it better?  Each school year really is a marathon and it isn’t good for the kids or the teachers to start the year exhausted.  Plus, starting off tired really sucks a whole lot of joy right out of a very happy time of year.  As teachers we are so fortunate to have the opportunity to start over each year with a new group of students.  We should be enjoying and embracing that, not struggling to finish each day or dig so deep for the energy to teach our kids properly that we have nothing left for our families or ourselves. 

I fully admit that I am a perfectionist and this is really hard for me.  I’m taking baby steps rather than do nothing and am sharing with you in case you too need to move away from starting the school year exhausted.  Some of the things I have tried this year:

Ø I scheduled a few days of icebreakers and getting to know you activities the first week of school.  My icebreaker included review questions to get me past my “I don’t have any days to waste with this curriculum” mentality. 
Ø Valid district assessments are being used as quiz grades.  I am required to have “x” number of quizzes and tests each marking period.  Using their assessments as a quiz helps cut down on the number of quizzes and the number of assessments my kids are taking.  Valid means the assessment is based on covered curriculum.  Unfortunately, not all of our district assessments are.
Ø Revisit my idea of a “quiz”.  I do a lot of interactive activities in my class.  We color, cut-and-paste, do walk-abouts, scavenger hunts, puzzles, play games, etc.  Since I was already using these activities to access student learning, it was easy to start using a few of them as assessments and the kids are more invested than ever knowing that the activity can be used as a grade.
Ø Understanding that great classrooms don’t have to be perfect.  Not having tutoring passes, groups arranged, color coded stations, and all my posters up did not have a negative impact on my kids.  They’re not looking for that stuff and it allowed me to be more present in the moment with them and have more family time.

I’m a work in progress and will continue trying to improve my back to school experience.  If you have ideas that work for you, I’d love to hear them.  Let’s start this marathon at a steady pace.

Happy teaching!