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Special Needs Parent’s Meeting Wednesday, May 25, 2011 at 6:00pm

Filed in polity, spiritTags: , , , , , ,

Special needs Parents for the Education of All Kids (S.P.E.A.K.) will be hosting an open forum for all Parents of special needs kids on Wednesday, May 25, 2011 from 6:00 – 7:00 pm at Merrimack Hall, 3320 Triana Blvd., Huntsville, Alabama 35803. This meeting is open to any parent or guardian of a special needs [...]

An Open Letter to Dr. Ann Roy Moore and the Huntsville City Schools Board of Education

Filed in media, polity, spirit, venomTags: , , , ,

To the Honorable Dr. Ann Roy Moore, Superintendent of Huntsville City Schools And to the Huntsville City School Board of Education Members: District 1: Laurie McCaulley, Vice-President District 2: David Blair District 3: Dr. Jennie Robinson District 4: Topper Birney, President District 5: Alta Morrison Dr. Moore and the Board: I am one of those [...]

Huntsville City Schools Special Needs Segregation Plans

Filed in polity, spirit, venomTags: , , , , , , , ,

Updated Below What was only a rumor two weeks ago is now a plan, albeit one that has yet to be shared with parents in writing. Approximately one hundred parents of special needs children, specifically parents of children on the autism spectrum, attended a meeting with Mrs. Amy Sledge, the Special Education Director for Huntsville [...]

Teaching Matters

Filed in polity, spiritTags: , ,

 

My First Grade Teacher

Updated Below:

“Miss” Beaver always gave the best hugs.

First thing in the morning, after walking to Sallie Z. for first grade, she was there in her classroom finding ways of making puke-colored cinderblock interesting to a six-year olds. But mostly, she just always gave great hugs. When I was excited about getting an “E” (for Excellent) on a reading test, she gave me a hug. When I was sad about getting a “P” (for Poor) on a hand writing test, she was still quick to give me a hug and tell me I could do it.  (I’m sad to say, Miss Beaver, my handwriting would still likely get a “P,” but I’ll happily take a hug, any time.)

When I fell on the playground, when I was the last one to get picked for kickball (I still find it astonishingly hard to connect with that stupid ball: think Charlie and Lucy with a football), or when I just walked past her in the lunchroom even after I had moved all the way to third grade, Miss Beaver was still there giving out hugs.

Those hugs mattered.

They made the ecstasy of passing a math test real by making it a shared event. They cushioned the blow of bombing those spelling tests that somehow made me dread every single Friday. A six-year old shouldn’t have to dread Friday, but Miss Beaver made it bearable.

She is still my teacher today.

Most of what I know about interacting with children, about encouraging them when they fall or fail, about jumping up and down with them when they succeed, about reaching out to them arms and heart wide open to celebrate this wonderful existence, I learned from watching her teach me and my friends in her class. Her influence is still felt today, thirty-six years later.

You can’t test for influence. No score on a standardized test reveals the effectiveness of a teacher like her. And if we as a country finally decided to actually support public education on a level commensurable to it’s importance, we would have to multiple our teachers’ salaries by a factor of about a hundred.

Teaching matters.

Thank you to all my teachers: past, present, and future. Thank you “times infinity” to those who have and are now teaching my kids. We’ll never be able to repay you for your service to our kids and our country, but we can, at least, stand with you when others devalue your service for their own political gain.

Teaching matters, and anyone who claims otherwise really needs a hug.

Update:

Mrs. Ann Beaver Mons passed away on Monday, January 21, 2008 at the age of 61. Requiescat in Pace, and thank you for all the hugs. Love, Rusty.

 

The World is Going to Hell in a Hand-basket!

Filed in venomTags: , , ,

I posted recently on the combination of Twitter and 24/7 news adding to the feeling of desperation in the world.  A wise commenter posted that it isn’t that the world is getting worse, we’re just hearing about it all the time.  I couldn’t agree more.  And I have an example to prove the point. Ask [...]

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