Tag Archives: Elementary

I’m No Expert, But I Can Help

I recently had a great experience skyping into a grade three class at @gcouros’s school in Canada to answer a few questions about Islam. You can read about the logistics on George’s blog. I wanted to share my thoughts on the event here.


After speaking with the class around eleven PM last night, this morning I woke up to the following email from the classroom teacher, and rather than send my response to her in private, in the spirit of openness and sharing I have decided to post it here. My response comes after her email, which you can read below:

Hi Jabiz,

I just wanted to thank you again personally for Skyping with our class this morning.  It was a very powerful experience and they learned a lot about the Muslim culture, country of Indonesia, and an important celebration of Ramadan and Eid-El-Fitr.  I realize there is a big time difference between us and I really appreciate you connecting with us late on a Friday night.  It was a very authentic and powerful experience for our students, as well as for me as a teacher.  We have now used a thumbtack on our world map to indicate where you are and remember the connection we have with you, both through your commenting on our blog post, as well as Skype conversation!

George is sharing his passion with us and is teaching us how technology is a great medium in connecting with others.  As I have just returned to school after a leave, I was quite apprehensive about the technology of our Smart Boards, new classroom blogs, etc.  This truly has proven what can be done and the connections that can be made around the world.  It is amazing and I am so proud and excited to be a part of it.  Again, thank you.

Let me start by saying it really is my pleasure and I enjoy doing it. I was home, sadly to say wasn’t doing much else, and really had a great time doing it. It’s funny, once you open yourself up to these opportunities the more you will find will come your way. I have Skyped into classes all over the world from grade three to university courses, and each time it is different, but just as exciting. I am not sure why students get so excited by having someone else come into their classrooms, but we should take advantage of this enthusiasm and open our classrooms up to as many people as we can, people who can bring fresh insights and different perspectives. I am by no means an expert on anything really, but I  feel that I have a voice and that my ideas are valuable. I see my world view as unique and feel that sharing it with others can bring value not only to them, but for me as well. This sense of appreciation for one’s own voice is at the heart of blogging and online life. This is what I hope to foster in my students. It is something to discuss with your kids as well. What are they experts in? How could they share their knowledge with others? I hope they can see that someday, I will need them to help and teach me and my kids. They are teachers and we are learners too.

I  understand how one can be apprehensive and doubt the value of all this openness and sharing. But as I am sure you have sensed from George, this is just what we do. There is a new class of teacher, and we have knocked down the walls of classrooms down and are looking for any opportunity to teach and learn from as many people as we can.  We are interconnected. We share knowledge, information, and resources fluidly and easily. We meet in person, we skype into classrooms. A class across the world has some questions about (insert topic) and we feel we have something to say we make the connections. This technology and these connections need not always be more complicated than that, as you have just seen from our Skype call. I hope this experience has shown you how easy it can be to join us. Just value your voice and build the connections. You are lucky to have such a passionate and connected administrator. Often times it is teachers who are pulling a school forward, but you have an administration who is there to help you. Take advantage. Your kids will thank you for it.

The next step of course is to connect students with students, but this often takes more time and planning, but once you are open to the idea of a  classroom that shares their ideas with the world through blogs and Skype, the opportunities become easier and easier to find. Remind the kids that if they ever have any questions about Indonesia, they now have a person they know here that can help them out. We have some great podcasts for them to listen to and we would love comments as well. Good luck and stay in touch.

First Day of School

I just left my screaming two year-old daughter in the hands of a complete stranger and walked away. I feel empty and a bit broken inside. I am panicky, tense, nervous and staring at the clock until I can retrieve her and cuddle her safely in my arms, where she obviously belongs. I double and triple check my phone to make sure it is ready to accept incoming calls.

“If she freaks out and cries for more than thirty minutes, call me. But she should be okay soon.”

“Of course. Of course. She will be fine.”

The woman reassures me, her face drenched in what appears to be sincere understanding or is it contempt. Today was the first day of school for my daughter Kaia. She just turned two in July, and she is, for all intents and purpose, still my little baby girl.  Nothing will ever be the same again.

Perhaps I am being a tad-bit overly dramatic, but up to this point in her life we have been blessed with the quality of childcare she has received. Her first year she was under the watchful eye of my Montessori-trained mother, and since then, we have been blessed to have a wonderful live-in nanny, Marilyn, whom Kaia adores. So why school? Why now?

As an educator and teacher myself, I feel I have a vested interest in answering that question. To label where she is going and what she is doing at this moment school may be a reach, it is really more of a daycare.  So if we have adequate childcare why did I leave her screaming in that room with strangers? I suppose this raises the enduring question of why school at all. That philosophical conundrum is too large in scope to address here, but worth thinking about nonetheless for all teachers. Why do parents willing leave their children in your care? What do they excpect? What do you offer? How often is this negotiation discussed?

Our justification is that the experience of going to daycare for four hours a day, three days a week, will be good for her social development, teach her how to interact with other children, other adults, situations where mommy and daddy are not there to run and cry to. At this stage of the game, I am not sure we expect her to actually “learn” anything more than that.

If this experience thus far has taught me anything, it is how to look at the whole education game from the vantage point of a parent. As a childless teacher, I always resented parents who insinuated that because I did not have a child of mine own I didn’t truly understand what it means to have a child in school. At the risk of upsetting my childless teacher friends, I think I now understand. Being a parent you see the classroom as a place that, in theory, should be built around the needs of your child, anything less is unsatisfactory. As a teachers, however,  we see the classroom as a communal space, where each child is another need we must tend to.

Achieving this balance between individual and communal, this differentiated instruction, if I may use the current jargon is the key to a successful classroom at all ages. This dichotomous relationship between self and society and the art of balancing the two sides is perhaps the biggest task a school could perform as a tool for socialization in our society. How do we teach kids to be cooperative, friendly, and kind while maintaining their individuality?

The two seconds it took for the teacher to pry Kaia from my arms, her eyes wet with tears, the terror of daddy leaving her in there, with them, alone, taught me more about the type of elementary teacher I need to be than a thousands hours of professional development would have. At that moment, I was surrendering the most valuable thing in my life to a person I was trusting on conjecture alone.

As I start a new chapter in my career as an elementary school teacher, I want to be the type of teacher who instills faith and trust in both parents and their children. This earned conviction begins with a warm smile and tender speech. As teachers we need to assuage parental anxiety buy putting ourselves in their shoes at every step of the game. Their child is not simply, “another face” in our room. Each child, no matter how rambunctious, no matter how rude, or quiet, or shy, or smart, or “slow” is the most important thing in their life. As teachers we must always remind ourselves of that.

I worked in the restaurant business as a waiter and a busboy for almost ten years, and to this day I cannot fully enjoy a meal without wondering: why my drink order hasn’t been taken yet, or why the check is taking so long, or why I haven’t been asked how everything is. Now as my little girl starts the thirteen yearlong journey into the world of institutional education, her teachers beware.

I am afraid I will be that parent; you know the one: “Oh she is super smart, she already knows all her colors and can name animals like Whooping Crane and Manta Ray, what do you mean she won’t follow instructions.” And for this I apologize in advance to all her teachers. But on the flipside, Kaia’s schooling will be schooling for me as well. Even after the initial two-minute exchange this morning; I have learned enough about being a good teacher than I ever did at university.

My hour is up and I need to go see how my little angel is doing. I haven’t received a phone call yet. Is she happily playing with the other children, or is she sitting in the corner screaming her lungs out while the teacher assumes that “toughing it out” is good for her. Oh teacher! Why would you ever take on that kind of responsibility?

End Note: I just got back from picking her up after an hour. She was sitting at a table eating her snack with seven other children. No trace of tears, smiling, and ready to go. That’s my girl!