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Wednesday brought another round of tests to finalize my Oregon teaching license. Last time was just math, reading and writing. This time it was a 150-question test over everything I ever learned in college--biology, genetics, chemistry, physics, geology, geography, math, world history, US history, English, teaching methods. You name it, it was on there. It was like a giant game of Jeopardy! I was very elated when I scored 96% on the test.
Thursday I got a sweet job as the wood shop teacher at the local high school. I had not been in a wood shop since 1988 in high school. And even then, I was much more busy flirting with the TA so he would do my projects than I was paying attention to anything the teacher said. It turned out to be a pretty easy sub job--no tools or machines were allowed. It was all a writing assignment for a project proposal. I impressed the other wood shop teacher as we were switching classrooms and I had a football player come up to me and tell me that he could not do the writing assignment because he had to leave school a half hour early for the football game. I handed him a paper and told him he had 20 minutes, so I hoped he was a fast writer. The other teacher said, "Nice answer!" Then he grabbed a piece of wood and a pencil off of a table and asked me what my sub # was.
Friday was a day I will never forget. I subbed in a middle school"technology" classroom. Basically the kids are either learning how to type or are working on some other computer assignment. I am not the kind of sub who will just sit at a desk and let kids do whatever. I roamed the room the entire time watching their screens to make sure they were all on the one and only program they were allowed to be on. I thought the day was coming to a very nice close, when about 20 minutes before the final bell, I heard a scuffle behind my back. A chair hit the floor and I turned around quickly and saw two boys punching each other. It took me a second to realize they were actually fighting and not just being "guys." I honestly have no idea what happened to start the fight--it was spontaneous combustion. Even the girl sitting next to the boys had no idea what started it!
I stepped right in the middle, grabbed the back of their shirts and ushered them out into the hallway. I showed them each a square on the floor and told them they could not move. I flagged down an office assistant who promptly got the principal to come take over. One boy was bleeding profusely from his nose, so I threw a tissue box at him and told him to make it stop. I stayed totally calm on the outside, but my heart was pounding like crazy on the inside!
After a crowd of administrators and teachers had gathered in the hallway to take over, I stepped back into the classroom and kept the kids working on their assignments until the bell rang. Then the teacher I had subbed for came into the classroom (he had been working on something else that day), and asked if I had been scared. I told him, "No. I have 7 kids, and 5 of them are boys." He laughed at first and then he stopped and stared at me. He asked how old I was, and I told him. Then he freaked out. It made my day. He said that he thought I was a new college graduate. I told him that I graduated from college 19 years ago.
Then the principal stopped me on my way out the door and told me that the teachers were talking about how calm I had stayed during the whole thing, and she wanted to thank me and make sure I was OK with everything. I told her the same thing about the 7 kids, and she was also very surprised. Then the secretary put me at the top of their school's priority sub list!
We'll see what happens.
And it all starts with a high school PE class tomorrow!
sounds like you are having a BLAST!
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