[Author Prev][Author Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Author Index][Thread Index] Re: Responses to Terrorism
I started my 101 class today doing something I normally don't do: I disclosed the reason that two of our classmates were not attending today. These two students serve in the same National Guard Unit and were called to active duty last night. We had an essay due today and both of these conscientious students made arrangements for me to get their paper. (Which, by the way, I found remarkable.) I was also surprised that all of the other students in my class had their essays ready to turn in today, though many admitted that it was very hard to concentrate as they tried to edit, proofread, and polish. But what struck me most was how these students seemed--finally--to have something real to connect to: they had classmates, two people they know (albeit for only four weeks) who were directly affected by yesterday's events. Nestled here in on a bluff of the Mississippi River, only three of of the remaining students had any connection to anyone in NY or DC. Knowing that piece of information seemed to make what was surreal now a bit more concrete for them. When I was a TA during the Gulf War, I never had a student called to duty, and I found at one point when I was telling the students about their classmates that I had to pause in order not to tear up. Then we talked a bit, but by the time class meet today at 3 p.m. as one student said, "We're talked out. We just need time now to start figuring things out." So, I announced about the campus blood drives and then we continued, at their request, carrying on with class as usual. As Libby mentioned earlier, we need to be aware to meet our students where they are in their development. Peace, Sharon
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