Full disclosure, the first day my students walked through
the door of Nemo Class I was scared of them. Don’t worry – the feeling was
mutual. I don’t know why I thought that teaching would be easy. I didn’t think
it would be easy because I know how hard teachers work. But, I guess I just
didn’t think it would be as hard as it was at the beginning. But why not?
Teaching 3-4 year olds who don’t speak much English, very rarely if at all have
spent time with a foreigner, had probably never spent time in a structured
environment, spent this much time away from mom . . . of course that is not
going to be easy.
Once I really thought about it in that way, I came to
understand that it’s going to take a while for us to be comfortable. And I
think by now we’ve reached that point. I’m having fun. Don’t get me wrong –
I’ve been having moments of fun in the last 2.5 months, but lately I’ve been having
longer periods of fun with the kids on a regular basis. I laugh at them daily.
That sounds mean but it’s true. They do such funny things. And this sound so
basic, but I’ve come to the conclusion that all this fun we are having is for
two reasons:
1. They are learning so much and showing me what they
know. It’s so gratifying. They get it! By
now most of my students have about 50 sight words, can count past 20, and know
about weather, feelings, body parts, and know the words to at least two dozen
songs. It’s hard to have fun when you don’t know anything.
2. I think THEY like ME. Actually I know they do because
THEY WON’T STOP TOUCHING ME. They keep doing things that show me how
comfortable they are. Here are a few examples:
At
circle time I usually try to sit with my legs criss-cross but when my knees get
sore I might stick one leg out. Maybe two if I’m feeling confident. Often Derek
will lift my pant leg up and stick his foot in there. Or stroke my leg hair.
Yesterday I wore sandals (no socks) and they became obsessed with my red toes.
They love to hold my toes when I wiggle them back and forth. Sometimes I wiggle
them towards them and they jump back scared of my toe monsters.
In the
last few weeks Amy (of the I lub you video) has started coming up to me and
hugging me randomly. I’ll be sitting on the mat reading a story and she’ll get
up and hug me around the neck. Sometimes that’s enough for her and she’ll sit
down. Sometimes she latches on to my whole upper half and I squeeze her back
for a bit before she sits down. The other day she came up to me and lightly
kissed my neck. It was so unexpected and now I have to watch her and tell her
no kissing.
I’ve
already told you about how they grab my boobs and bum so I won’t bore you with
that. One time I was reading them a favourite book – There Was an Old Lady who
Swallowed a Fly – and at the part where she swallows a cow there is a picture
with a giant cow with an utter. We’ve read this book so many times but the other
day Mini crawled up to the utter and pretended to suck on it. When I tell you
that I laugh at these kids daily I truly do.
But I will tell you 2.5 months ago I never thought these
moments would happen. Half the class – I’m not lying- would cry daily. Now they
come into the room and joke with me. They come in off the bus and say “Good
Morning.” Aaron who was (and still is)
my trouble maker, who would just run around and hit everyone, who made my
original Korean supervisor quit, who we asked to have removed from the school
because we couldn’t control him now comes up to me most days and says “happy!”
I ask, “Aaron is happy?” He says, “yes!”
They trust me. At least one kid a day comes into the room
with candy or a toy in their hand. It used to be a horrendous battle to get
them to put it in their bag. TRUST ME – it will be there later. But they just
didn’t. And now they do. When I tell them to put it in their bag they just put
it in there and it’s over. No tears. No whining. I had to laugh the other day when Amy shoved a
candy up her dress and walked to the mat holding the bottom of her dress with a
big bump in the middle. (Oh gosh Amy, you look totally normal. You can’t
possibly be hiding anything under there!) I just pointed without even saying
anything and directed her back to her bag. She put it in there and sat down.
I just love how they can’t handle having a candy in their
pocket. They have to touch it. I tell them to leave it and take their hand out
and put it on their lap. 10 seconds later that hand is back in there. I can’t
help how cute it is to see a 4 year old with a candy in the pocket of their
blazer. Are you 4 or 84?
I guess it’s true . . . both time and consistency build
trust. If I do the same boring thing every day they will trust me. And it
works. (Hello men of the world.) This is
such a basic concept and I notice it when things aren’t consistent. The other
day was “Arbor Day” which really was just 10 minutes of a photo op with a kid
putting a flower in the ground and me smiling beside them. But it was such a
disruption to our day that they were wily after that. So, the following day it
was right back to normal and were all comfortable again. I knew it instantly
when Lucy, who hasn’t shown much affection yet, crawled into my lap as I read “What
the Sun Sees, What the Moon Sees” and none of the other kids felt left out. At
first when things like that happened I thought the others would be jealous and
want to compete. But when Amy hugs me for a minute as we sing Twinkle Twinkle
or Lucy sits in my lap as I read, the others just accept it. Maybe it’s because
they know that one day they will need that and it will be available to them.
But for now, poking my big toe for 10 minutes is good enough.
Who are these people? They are weird and wonderful.
Lucy, photobomb by Mini
Aaron
Mini
Amy
Sue
Jay
Derek
Jenny
I do not have a favourite. I repeat, I do not have a favourite.









I think you have a favourite. :)
ReplyDelete