Closing the Doors on the School Year
I finally checked out of my classroom today. The deadline was last Friday, but since it was a holiday weekend, I knew that no one would be in until tomorrow and I could put it off, this thing I was dreading, until today.
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And then, suddenly and with very little warning, it was over.
I miss my students. About a third of them are still participating in school work, and I get to see their faces in Flipgrid assignments and interact via Remind, Google Forms, and email. But two thirds of them have disappeared, taking about 150 of my textbooks with them.
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This was not how I wanted the school year to end. This was the year that I planned to rebuild my room, rebuild my curriculum, rebuild my mental health, and rebuild my relationships with students. Instead, it became the year where I broke my ankle, was publicly embarrassed by some well-meaning but misinformed individuals, was ghosted by people I cared about, and then dealt with the whiplash of a sudden closure of schools.
But it was also the year that I rebuilt my room, and my curriculum, and my mental health, and my relationship with students. And that last part --that relationship with students-- can't be diminished by the rest of the things completely out of my control. Although half of my eclectic lunch crew has graduated, the other half will be back in the fall. And those relationships with students --that's the part that I need to remember and need to focus on, as I wave to students at the end of the driveway on Wednesday. It's because of them that I remember why I became a teacher in the first place and why I will continue to teach, long after this pandemic is over.
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