Saturday, July 21, 2007

of books and beatings

First, the books:

I have in my posession not one but FOUR copies of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - two mine and two McD's - and, as of about 11:40, I have finished reading one of them. Fear not, for I will not spoil, but I will say that I feel the book's emotional peak came about two-thirds through, and that you should skip the epilogue, and that I was half-amused, half-irritated by brazen lifts from Lord of the Rings, The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe and - wait for it - Return of the Jedi. All in all I enjoyed the experience - there's nothing quite as nice as an uniterrupted read-through - and I think I enjoyed the book, though it's hard to say since I was clearly going to read it either way, lest I be consumed by the desire to know, before anyone else, How It Ends.

In other YA news I have recently read A Great And Terrible Beauty, Rebel Angels, and Tyrell, which were extremely enjoyable, and Rooftop, which wasn't. Then I got sucked into Shame of the Nation, which is going to be one of my students' choices for lit circles when we come back on track in November. It is going to kick their butts, but I'm on this whole Challenging Kick, which is to say that I don't think I've been pushing anyone nearly hard enough except my ESL classes with Romeo and Juliet last year, and it's about time I hold everyone to the same standard. I expect great things this year.

Which leads us to the business:

From an academic standpoint, the new year is going really well. To my great surprise and relief I love teaching American Lit, mostly because I am completely ignoring the suggested curriculum and instead doing a unit on immigration policy, reading op-eds and articles and interviews and working on discerning the authors' underlying philosophical beliefs and assumptions. This is harder than it sounds. I spend a lot of time talking about "Habits of Mind," and stressing the importance of reading not just for information but for those little tidbits of word choice and rhetoric that give away the author's position. It's difficult for many of the kids because of just how much they go through in pursuit of the literal meaning of something like an Economist article, let alone delving beneath its surface. We're leading up to a complex position paper integrating multiple sources and a variety of modes of writing, so I think next week I have to take a step back and make sure we're really clear on what's gone on so far. Last week was a little crazy, so some of what we've done has started to feel a little unravelled from the whole.

Per craziness: the vibe on campus is changing. We had a series of fights and a resulting lockdown a week ago Friday, and another fight and a lot of (well-deserved) administrative crackdown on Wednesday. The kids are doing this meerkat thing at lunch, standing up on the benches and craning their necks to see where the action is going to be. Rumors are swirling about some Latino kids, probably Florencia, beating an African-American kid pretty badly - maybe a Blood, maybe not - and revenge being forthcoming.

Meanwhile, in addition to this campus-wide tension, my SLC has its own saga unfolding, with one of my former students. While I never had a personal problem with this kid - he was always polite to me and everyone in my class, despite attempting a grand total of one (1) assignment all semester - I know that he's up to his ears in Florencia, on parole (the story behind this is like Russian dolls, one offense nestled inside the next), the owner of some very nasty and unexplained scars, and high more or less all the time.

Our story begins on Wednesday during break, when I happen to glance out the window and see an unfamiliar kid on my balcony whip off his shirt and disappear around the corner to a rapt audience of about 20 kids. I am running towards the door with one hand already dialing the phone when I hear a heavy thud against my wall.

(I was talking to a colleague the other day, and we agreed that while we generally feel dumber than we did before taking this job, it has done miracles for our reaction time.)

So I get outside just in time to see my former student along with three of his friends, clad in Brown Pride finery, take off down the hallway, leaving a kid curled against the wall next to my room and a Hansel-and-Gretel-esque trail of little blood drips behind them. I follow, I find security, I write my statement. I figure, he's on parole. He must be out of here.

But oh! Not so. No indeed; he is back in class the next day. This story continues, but it's getting long already. The quick-and-dirty version is that he brags to me that he had in fact jumped this kid, making a charming stomping motion on the ground and laughing, "This is what we did to him, Miss. Send me back to the deans. I'll still be here." He has discovered, as we teachers already know and dread, that students designated as Special Ed for any reason, not just behavioral problems, more or less cannot be expelled or OT'd. They have to be put on a "behavior plan," which translates pretty well to total immunity. I would like to think that "Do not beat the shit out of people" is a pretty basic behavior plan and that he has clearly violated said, but that's not how it works. Come to think of it, I'd like to assume that beating the shit out of people is a violation of his parole, but that doesn't seem to be a problem either.

Anyway, outside of my English classes and Leadership activities and taking care of my community's two new English teachers, finding a loophhole on this kid is priority one. He knows I'm actively watching him and reporting back to the deans, so while I have personally never felt threatened by him (he seems to feel that being on his case is my job, just as maiming is his), it is probably a good thing that I have no car to key or anything.

6 comments:

X said...

Oh yes, the infamous epilogue. I couldn't stand it. So many people I know liked it, but there are a handful of us who realized that it was...

I have no words.

Hope all is well :c)

mina said...

I can't imagine why anyone would like it. It tells us nothing about the characters we WANT to hear about. I mean, was there any doubt that things would turn out well for those mentioned - and then to have no news of those handed tragedy and loss?!? ARGH ARGH ARGH. And it didn't even say anything *substantial.* It was all very....bourgeois. Worse, it sucked the life right out of the book's real ending.

In other news, it is difficult to fume properly about this without naming names.

annie said...

as for the IEP, i also have a kid who's IEP calls for lessening episodes of pounding on other students. what is with that? i always wonder what parents would do if they found out it was "okay" for their child to be beat on.

it's just not right. and it comes from the administration not having the guts to send the student to appropriate placement. ie, jail or live-in counseling.

siobhan said...

holy mother of god...i can't even imagine what it must be like for the average kid at your school...columbine scared the living hell out of me and i was afraid to go to school in Cowpokeville.

i think a lot of the comments i leave on your blog are, "omg there are GANGS???! that's so scary, dude" i'll stop doing that.

on harry potter: i never got into the series myself, but i thought it was supercute that a ton of professors were all about it last month. klinton's advisors had a meeting which turned into an hour and a half of reading HP because they were all on the brink of finishing.

i want to play with your new kitteh!!!

annie said...

siobhan

don't stop leaving those comments. it's very heartening to know that somewhere there aren't any gangs or misguided administrators.

your comments are like a sip of cool water on a hot day.

mina said...

Yeah, it's actually nice to be reminded that things I now accept as completely normal are in fact deeply un-normal. In the midst of this week or so of lunchtime fights was parent night, and all the teachers were like, "Ooh, do you think if we get locked down they'll cancel it?" That's not cool, you know? Violence is so normal that my first thought is how I can benefit from it. The kids are pretty numb to stuff like this, too - they've seen a lot more of it than I have and it becomes the norm right quick. They view fights as pure entertainment - the bigger, the better. Feelings about gangs run the spectrum. Kids get jumped on the way to and from school with alarming regularity, usually for ipods or PSPs or the like, but they don't live in fear of it at all. The acceptance is more alarming in some ways.

Mom, you've hit on something there with the reluctance to put kids in the appropriate placement. No one wants to put a kid in jail, and that's definitely a good reluctance to have, but at some point violating parole needs to mean something. I've got another kid right now - he's the stuff of legend, this one - who's also on parole, high all the time, tagging every day, and has beat up at least one kid in the past three weeks. His PO convinced the victim to change his statement - the exact words were, "It wasn't him anymore." Awesome. The sad thing about this one is that he has some kind of untreated attention deficit problem, which contributes to his failing his classes. If he's failing, he goes back in, so why not beat up some kids on the way?

I'm working on the ADD thing, but it's paperwork, paperwork, paperwork and our [one] psych/social worker is only half-time. Of course.

J, the kittehs would love to be played with. Especially if you are at all talented at dragging a piece of string along the floor.