[Author Prev][Author Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Author Index][Thread Index] RE: [gradtalk] gradtalk
i appreciate everyone's sharing how their community is handling this horror. i teach 10th grade english in virginia, 50 miles east of richmond--this is my first year teaching, and yesterday it was difficult to maintain my usually patient front for students--i found myself not being able to handle one of my student's ignorance--he asked me why it mattered was happening in new york & why football practice was cancelled. at the time i was worried about my own family and friends who work in those areas and couldn't seem to answer him with the patience and understanding i should have. some of you have spoken to the reactions of young teenagers and how difficult it can be for them to handle emotions like that, and i completely agree--for many of them, their lives have been so isolated from any concept of connection to rest of the country, much less the world, so they honestly cannot begin to grapple with the magnitude of yesterday's events and the way they have altered the world forever. one of my students came to me at the end of first period this morning asking if he could turn in his homework tomorrow as he, tear-choked, attempted to explain that his cousin and possibly his aunt, were trapped inside the world trade center when it collapsed. my heart split in two as this boy who is usually stone-faced, broke down before me. i have wanted to have them write about this, but many of them are not ready, and for some it is too painful to even mention right now--another of my students still doesn't know if her grandparents were on one of the flights that left from boston, she can't get in touch with them, but knew they were on a flight early that morning from boston to the west coast. i am thinking of having them write in their journals over the weekend, so they have some private time to reflect first. thanks to everyone for opening up this forum for us to get support. i feel like i don't know what the right thing to do is as a teacher of teenagers...i'm just taking it as it comes, sensing the needs of my students, and balancing them with my own. kara eller, tappahannock, va
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