Posts Tagged ‘Far Rockaway High School’

my job

June 10th, 2010

I came into work today. I had an extra 10 or so minutes before students would show up. I sit down and continue reading my novel (In the Hand of Dante, Nick Tosches; pretty good in certain chapters). I always make it a point to sit in an empty classroom and read. students walk in on me and I think that sends a good subliminal message and sets a good example.

my student comes in. he says, “I’m not going to the prom tonight.” I give him a puzzled look and he repeats, “you may have heard there’s a prom tonight. well, I’m not going.” I ask why, fully expecting him to say he was too shy to ask anyone out and fully expecting to commiserate. “I have to attend a funeral. some time last week, my cousin was going to a party and this guys pulled up and they had machine guns.” these are the first sentences I have heard all day.

this is also the first time I’ve seen him since he took the SATs on Saturday. we talk about that a little; he felt ok about his essay, using 1.5 examples when I told him to use 3. he felt great about the verbal because a lot of the words we crammed the day before were on the test. I ask if he wants to talk about anything else, implying if he wanted to talk about his cousin (I’m not a guidance councilor, I’m not equipped to have these discussions). he says no and we do regents prep work.

instead of the usual setting, I have him stand in front of the chalkboard alongside me. kind of like in Tae Kwon Do, when we practice side by side instead of face to face. he still gets a lot of it wrong; thinks he can do everything in his head; doesn’t write equations down; misplaces a term here and there. he doesn’t think computationally like I do, which is appalling because math is his best subject and he wants to be a computer programmer.

it’s a little ridiculous what we’re doing, in wake of what has happened. why does it matter that the area of a triangle is 1/2 base times height instead of just base times height when someone who shares his mother’s maiden name got shot last week? but I am not a social worker; don’t ever want to be. even though they do good work, it’s so very depressing. also, his only key out of that neighborhood is college, even if it’s only for 4 years (or, in his case, 2). that’s 4 years he won’t get shot at.

we’ll see.

notes that will someday (soon) become a poem (or poems)

June 3rd, 2010

I come into work and am greeted by a student I haven’t seen in 3 weeks. I’ve been meaning to talk to his guidance counselor but even she has been out every time I try to find her. He finally tells me he’s been taking after school classes to earn art credit for graduation and that’s why he’s been missing my class that he’s been taking for gym credit. We’re putting on an end of year show in 2 weeks; pretty standard procedure for arts enrichment programs and resident teaching artists. These shows have insured or doomed my rehirings for the next year. This student was half my show.

I try to talk him into working hard, pushing through, and doing both the art class and mine, partly because I fear for my job but also because he’s good at and dedicated to Tae Kwon Do. He agrees and I can’t quite tell if it’s only because he doesn’t want to disappoint me. I gather my things — $300 worth of paddles and martial arts movies that some corporation started by a social worker paid for — and head out to my classroom. I spot him walk back into the assistant principal’s office, probably to talk about grades. Last I heard, he was going to Nassau College next year. Last I heard.

I enter to my room and set down. I’m only thinking about a piss because these 40 minutes only ever had 1 student and, for the last 3 weeks, has had 0, so I have time to kill. He walks by my door, the used-to-be, the hopefully-once-more student but doesn’t stop. Some tones play over the P.A. system, a threnody, and I think: fire drill; standing outside in 80 degree heat in a shadeless neighborhood with low rising buildings and low expectations of its children. Great. Instead, the assistant principal announces all staff to lock their doors. I guess that includes me, the unlicensed after school teacher who teaches credit bearing classes anyhow. I know its her because I spoke to her about other students, making sure they all received credit to graduate. She says it’s a Code Blue, repeats those 2 words and the 3 numbers of the room where its happening — one two zero.

She’s wrong. It’s not in Room One Two Zero. It’s in the hallway right outside. I can see friezes of it from my room, number One Two Five: a hunched over male, 3 adults circled half around. I’m still too young and too afraid of death to look any more. Blue, like the shirts, beads, and bandanas that half the student body wears. Blue, like a girlfriend’s veins.

(On the train this morning, I saw a mother smack her toddler. I didn’t say anything any of the 3 times she did it. The child threw her bottle down and when I handed it back to the mother, I looked closely at her face and found no warmth. Later, when all the stops were above ground and the 80 degree sun was bleeding through the windows, a group of college girls came on. They must have been because the colleges were out but the high schools, in New York City, were still in session. It was noon and I was headed to teach so surely they weren’t young and ditching class because what would I be without students? They started playing with the girl, laughing at how she negotiated the rumbling subway car, at how she smiled. Later, between my stop and my school’s front door, I thought: I want to have children of my own some day. I want to create something from scratch, to write it together helix by helix, vein by vein.)

My first guess is stabbing. In this school, someone would get stabbed. Except a Code Blue is probably just someone choking, getting blue in the face. By now, all of the security guards on the first floor have gathered outside my door. Blue shirts, black pants, a trail of wire running up their shoulders. I get flashbacks from my first class here, the first time I ever taught poetry: 8 students and I were about to head into our room when another kid decides to pick a fight with a guard. He doesn’t want to be called a kid, wants to be a man and independent and stand up to authority. So he does and they, there’s 3 guards now, push him into my room, all spit and sweat and swear words. The last guard locks the door behind them and a student says to me: glad you chose to come here?

I hear them counting outside. One two three four. Breath. One two three four. Breath. Someone says, did you call 911? and I’m sitting in an empty classroom, typing every fresh memory into my iPhone. I hear the lull of a flatline beat, the hiss of a defribulator. It doesn’t take a story teller to piece together what’s going on.
I hear instructions being dictated, how the speaker pauses after each sentence to make sure he’s understood. Then, laughter, from the blue shirts that don’t wear beads or bandanas. I like the EMT they brought in, how he lightened the mood after all was said and done. It’s a skill that took me years to develop.

The crowd outside disperses; the assistant principal announces that we can go back to our usual schedule. I sit in an empty classroom for another 15 minutes. By the time my next student comes, I’m only half done with this story. I click off my iPhone, leave it on the desk, and turn to get my binder. He asks, there was a code blue? Quickly, I look to see if I forgot to turn off my phone. Then, I wonder if he has some sort of xray vision, that he can see through my device, somehow, to the data it holds.

No. He was simply in the same building at the same time. I dismiss it, say, yeah, I heard, and go on with the rest of the day.

addendum

March 27th, 2010

yesterday, 1 of my problem students came to me, the student with the academic problem. he hasn’t been coming to my program at all for the last few months, even though whenever we pass by, he smiles and promises he’ll go. he stopped by my class and said he would have stopped by sooner but he got jumped on the way to school. 8 students attacked him and his friend. he also said, “oh yeah, by the way Mr. Chin, I might have broken someone’s arm. I used that thing you taught me last year.”

8 students attacking 2 students
broken arm
something I taught him last year
he smiled when he said it

I have a lot of mixed emotions to sort through regarding this.

students

March 27th, 2010

I’ve got 2 problem students. not in the sense that they create
problems but moreso that they /are/ problems.

I took a bunch of kids on a field trip last year to a prestigious
college, both as a campus visit and to see a Tae Kwon Do tournament.
lately, this girl who we brought has been asking me questions about
the college. today, she cinched it and asked, “what kind of grades do
you need to get in? 75′s? 80′s” I took the easy way out and told her I
don’t know; that she’d have to talk with a recruiter. I pushed the
hard work off on to someone else. how was I supposed to tell her that
80′s wouldn’t cut it? that, considering the neighborhood, she was
lucky enough to go to any college, let alone a prestigious 1. or that
even if she did get in, she has no idea of the /scope/ or /magnitude/
of the tuition. we’re talking $50,000 a year. she’s a good kid though,
always has been. maybe I’ll hand her a brochure anyway …

the other kid, we have this established silence. we greet each other
but I stopped asking why he stopped coming to my program. usually, I
hound students about attendance to show them at least 1 teacher cares
and also to instill discipline, responsibility, and pride in them. I
stopped hounding this kid. I know he has trouble at home, almost got
arrested and had to go to court, was about to get transferred out, and
is failing. his primary guardian is his grandfather, no mention of mom
or dad, and he has what looks like a healed over burn scar on 1 hand.
large and unmistakable; on black people, the skin comes back a lot
lighter; he sometimes wears gloves in class. he wants to come to my
class — sometimes would ditch the entire day of school but come in to
do the activities (martial arts and photography). he’s actually on a
watch list to prevent exactly that. so instead of hounding him, we
both just say hi; probably say a little more in the silence that
follows.

like I said, problem students.

cookbook

December 28th, 2009

Frank McCourt once taught a creative writing class using recipes from cookbooks. he stumbled on the idea, on a lark, not know what to do with it initially.

a year ago, I was preparing to teach a slam poetry class and came upon the idea of using recipes to explore adjectives and description. (are recipes that commonplace in creative writing classes?). anyhow, the lesson flopped. partly because I wasn’t so prepared, didn’t have the experience (in teaching a writing class) how to commandeer the lesson and minds, but also because my students (all 2 of them) were not really poets and certainly not Stuyvesant students.

Acclimate

September 14th, 2009

Acclimate

The first ride is blinding.
Every surface from bay to beach
to boardwalk seems coated in silver
so the sun, first yellow then white
as on a kernel of sweet corn,
has no other home but the eyes.
The windows can’t be made
of anything but quartz,
so tolerant they are of light.
This must be the opposite of blindness;
not seeing but only seeing white.
One might be lucky to find
a herd of clouds or a pause
in the naked framework of the bridge
where enough support beams converge
to give shade, though crisscrossed
like the arms of neighboring pines.

Only on the second ride,
not the return trip but the tomorrow
or the next week ride,
can one spot the details.
The bay is quilted in waves,
patterned as a bolt of hounds-tooth.
The seats, once slippery from gloss,
are scratched with the epics
and artwork of vagrants.
In the east, there are buildings
of course dwarfed by perspective
but only half hidden in the blare
of their own window-shine.
The repeat commuter can pick out
the grit of the walls, the smudges
on the glass. The wood
in the pier has rotted to wool.

When the act of the sun
setting perfectly between 2 columns
of the opposite bridge in the distance
is no longer a miracle of luck or labor,
there is still the airport to watch.
A departing plane makes such an angle
with the earth that it seems a trout,
25 tons and silver banded,
hooked by the nose and yanked.
If passengers could step outside
the cabin and see the gravity of their flight
they would feel fools for paying for tickets.

The high school student, named Terrail,
rides the train but only from the south end
to the north end of the island.
Below him, his barrio is dressed
in chip bags and soda cans.
If he listens to fast loud music,
empty of silence and pregnant with power chords,
it is only to whitewash the gunshots.
When he’ll commute across the bay
for college, he’ll learn the beauty
of the little and the large things
around him.

Students

April 30th, 2009

it’s fairly common for poets and writers to take sub prime jobs. because of a lack of funding and interest, a lot of my peers lead workshops with at risk youth or incarcerated individuals. the first few times are awkward and curious. I imagine the poet would walk in, expecting the kids or inmates to bite. but, after a while of opening up, they become just regular students. the poet then gets lost in this illusion (or, depending on how you look at it, this reality) and forgets he’s why he’s working with these people. there develops a gnawing temptation to ask why this boy is in the program (is his mother passed? has he been held back 2 years?) or how this guy landed in prison (did he steal money? did he put someone in the hospital?). there are totally legitimate rationalizations to finding these things out and to not to. it happened to a close friend of my poetry professor in college. it’s happening to me now.

we went on a trip today. I spent a significant amount of time around some of our kids. we’re 1 of those attendance retaining programs, so if someone is a part of us, there’s a reason. there was this guy who was talking about his situation. his girlfriend’s 4 months pregnant. I just sat there trying to piece this reality together. he’s still in high school, isn’t old enough to order alcohol at a restaurant, not mature enough to even know that water is free in a restaurant, and someone’s going to call him Daddy. it makes me sad because his child will start with a serious disadvantage, which will only spiral down from there. it’s a self replicating dilemma. I … we, my coworkers and me, are there to try and break that cycle. but I feel powerless. I’m there to teach things like scansion and meditation; how the hell is that going to do anything for this kid? I could dedicate myself to helping him out (something I don’t mind doing) but there’s only 1 of me and probably half a dozen more like him. at times, I feel it’s a losing proposition.

and I look toward my other kids. the students who respect and listen to me, who try to emulate me. on more than 1 occasion, they’ve attempted to ditch their classes and spend more time with me. I hope it’s not because of the content of what I teach (say, how to defend against a knife slash) but the manner in which I teach (forgiving, relentless, intense personal attention, humor, directness … love). I get lost in the euphoria of being a good teacher that sometimes it hits me; they’re a part of my program for a reason. I’ve been tempted to ask about their situations but so far have refrained myself.

I worry actually knowing will depress me even more.

fatherhood

April 28th, 2009

On Fatherhood

it’s funny: 1 of those inane Facebook quizzes got me thinking. is it unnatural for me to be thinking about fatherhood so much? on 1 hand, I’m not even moderately employed, have no sense of a career, cannot even start a romantic relationship, still live with my parents, and am, in certain ways, still a boy myself. then again, I work exceptionally well with children, am an outstanding role model, and am 100% love, care, and dedication.

yesterday, a boy, couldn’t have been more than 3 years old, played Peek a Boo with me on the bus. it was spontaneous. I was lost in my iPod and mulling and suddenly realized what was happening. it, in subtle ways, changed me. later that day, 1 of my high school students came to me and presented 2 of his poems. he talked to me and told me how his family moved to a new house the day before and after all the requisite labor of packing and unpacking, he shut himself in his room and, to relax, wrote poetry. the sentiment moved me — he saw this work as pleasure / escape and, moreso, stepped outside of his comfort zone. he was certainly not a writer or poet when I met him in October 2008.

in some ways, his writing style reminds me of my own. he has an incredibly innate sense of rhyme and rhythm that comes through unconciously. I encourage him at every turn but also admonish him when needed — when he doesn’t have an assignment I asked of him, he avoids me, afeared of my wrath. in a way, he doesn’t want to disappoint me. I told him to share his work with other people, to gather different opinions and reactions other than my own. he told me, in so many words, that he felt most comfortable sharing with me because I am different from everyone else. I’m moulding him.

there’s another student of mine, a few weeks ago, who was eating apple slices and spitting the seeds straight on the floor. I happened to be walking by and, out of reaction, said, what the hell? the disrespect, the act just caught me by surprise. he apparently took it as a hint and starting spitting them into a garbage can. it’s a small gesture, for sure, but perhaps meaningful.

there are other teaching artists working at my school. back when I was only there 2 days a week, the kids would talk about me to the other artists; when I took days off of work, they would ask after me. the lunch room staff has observed this also and have let me know — the kids really are looking forward to my class and make it a point to come to school for it.

I’m generally exceptionally humble (the over the top bravado I often put on is a device to put others at ease) but I’d like to think I’m accomplishing exactly what my job description says I should be: improving students’ attendance and providing an upstanding role model. it’s not just martial arts or even just physical fitness. once I’ve gotten their trust through Tae Kwon Do, I start talking to them about classes and family and girls and college. I connect with them, at first because I didn’t want my supervisor to think I was slacking off for lack of students, but now because I’m generally interested and somewhat invested in their lives.

I met with my little brother last weekend. it was our 4th outing and we, again, went to the park. I don’t personally interact with him as much as I used to, playing games with just the 2 of us. part of the time (about 25%) he plays with the other kids at the park and I supervise. it’s mostly because I don’t have the space nor equipment to really play with him 1-on-1. next time, I’ll have a basketball and we’ll shoot some hoops. on a side note, it’s inutterably refreshing to have a relationship with a 9 year old who doesn’t expect me to do martial arts with him. anyhow, he got me an Easter present. just some chocolate and a card, but Easter was already a week old. it meant that he was thinking about me (fondly) when I wasn’t there. that means a lot. also, when I was leaving, he ran up and hugged me. I hadn’t realized I was making such a positive impact on him. it puts me in a small dilemma because I don’t really feal an emotional connection with him. it’s kind of a 1 way street right now but I … honestly … feign it.

What Teachers Make

January 27th, 2009

last Friday, I held a writing exercise. the students were given a random line from Agha Shahid Ali and had to use it as their first line. 1 student started saying, man, you’re making my head hurt. my response? that feeling is called thinking. sorry to make you think, you know, in a classroom. for the record, his poem was pretty damned good, especially for a 10 minute write. also for the record, I’ll be reworking my attempt at the writing exercise into a full fledged genu-ine poem.

exceptional students

December 15th, 2008

I take back what I said a week or so ago. Far Rockaway isn’t the kind of school that Teach For America tells scary stories about.

last Friday was report card day and 1 of my students got a 97.5 GPA, equivalent to A+. his response to all the congratulations wasn’t I tried hard or it was hell or I’m really gunning for this scholarship, but my mom is going to be really proud.

I teach the kid poetry and he takes to it like a fish to water. attendance in my class has been dropping (it’s on a voluntary basis) and I told him it might end up being just me and him. he said, I don’t care if it’s just me, I’ll still fight to keep this group going.

he wants to be a broadcast journalist, not a poet. he won’t even minor in English, just philosophy. but he’s very literate, reads books for fun. and good books, not Michael Crichton shit. I’ve only heard his writing once and there wasn’t much craft in it. still, he loves it.

and I found out he doesn’t even have the highest GPA. the valedictorian is another student of mine.

last Saturday was my 2nd week at the YMCA teaching spoken word. I didn’t get any (exactly 0) students the week before and I got just 1 student this time around. I was making small talk with him:
how long have you been coming to the YMCA?
just 2 weeks.
really? why did you start coming? what activities attracted you?
spoken word.

I was talking to my director and she said he only comes for spoken word. he doesn’t stay for anything else.

I gave him some free writing time and he started writing a novel. he doesn’t have any craft either but he’s very eager. I taught him about showing vs. telling, something so basic but something he really needed.

I think I have prodigies on my hands. if anything, I know that I have an obligation as a teacher to help them grow and develop. I also have an obligation as a poet to turn them into poets. I can’t slack because they look to me, literally. working with the little 1s with Tae Kwon Do, they don’t always show appreciation. for a long time, I had this feeling like I was a wandering teacher, like I taught anybody anything just for a few dollars, without regard to their desires or potential. I’ve since been proved wrong (with the little 1s) and proven even wronger with these poetry kids.