When I posted about the project previously, McEwans asked in the comment thread if I could share some of the students’ stories. Here's a sampling of their stories and the trends...
Overall:
Most of the students give a lot of credit to their parents for instilling values, morals, principles and beliefs. Family was overwhelmingly their most credited influence. A lot of students mentioned chores and being a participating member of their home with a needed role as an important aspect of who they are and how they fit in. Especially students who have to help with younger siblings in the afternoons until parents come home from work.
Friends and peer relationships, of course, figure prominently into their middle and high school years. They are greatly influenced by their peer relationships. It was inspiring to read how some students, upon realizing they had chosen friends with dissimilar values, were brave enough to go and make new friends.
Most of the students who credited God, religious beliefs, and church involvement felt it helped them resist negative peer and societal influences. For these students religion has been a positive experience that has helped mature them with empathy and mindfulness. Others felt disconnected and disappointed from their experiences with organized religions. Some students who go to more zealous and narrowly pedantic churches seemed less empathetic and more judgmental towards others.
The negative factor that shaped their lives and which was cited most often was divorce. This was mostly true when the divorce was bitter or a parent became absent. One student revealed the difficulty of dealing with feelings of jealousy towards friends and cousins who had a father present in their lives.
Students who are fully engaged in school and have engaging exeriences are usually involved in a program outside of core subjects. Band, music, art, sports, dance, student government, extracurricular clubs were all cited as major factors in shaping them and influencing them positively. These factors are the reasons (along with their friends) that they love coming to school. (So please keep out the shout to not cut these programs)
They value their education more than they admit to on a day to day basis.
Those who have gone through tough times in their young years (domestic violence, parental drug abuse, abandonment) could break your heart not only by their resilience, but also by their forgiveness and unconditional love.
Specifically, some highlights and quotes:
My grandfather was a huge influence. He took me fishing and to the beach and spent a lot of time teaching me things from his life. I am proud of him because he served our country in WWII.
A poem of growing up in domestic violence titled “When My Blue Skies Turned Grey”
Another poem a student wrote about her current relationship with her parents includes these two lines:
I hate how we can’t talk like we used to
There are so many things that I want to tell you
Or this insight from an essay, Growing up an only child, I got sunburned from the spotlight that my parents always shined on me.
Another student wrote that her jealousy of her little sister’s birth when she was five and the consequences of being pushed out of her parents spotlight were the factors that drove her to seek excellence in academics (and regain her parents’ attention).
I loved the idealism of some of the students. One wants to become a pharmacist. But she did not write about making her own personal fortune in the pharmaceutical business. Instead she shared how she would like to start a program to bring much needed medications and vaccines to third world countries.
One student’s poem describes her feelings when she passes the beach parks with the tent cities of the homeless:
Tides of grief rolled into my heart
And left my body quaking
My comfort burst by Indigence’s dart
A dream was birthed, a goal set
To aid families down on their luck
To cleanse the next generation of our regrets.
Another student wrote his poem about how he used sleep as therapy to get him through the angst of middle school. A few lines of a six stanza poem:
What wonders it brings
to shut my eyes closed
and put down all the walls,
and weapons and soldiers
that keep me safe from
the biting and gnashing of bitter teeth
and bothersome, mindless chatter of the world.
Please leave me for awhile
And I will reach you across the wide oceans of my mind
Through the colossal mountains of thought
Beneath the clouded sky of reflection
And speak with you
In the green fields of sleep.
Or a poem about a parent who made some bad choices that includes these lines:
When your hero falls from grace
All fairy tales are uncovered
When your hero falls from grace, so do the stars
And your perception of tomorrow.
Some students prefaced their essays with a favorite quote:
“Opportunity is not a lengthy visitor” Into the Woods
“Wars and elections are both too big and too small to matter in the long run. The daily work that goes on, it adds up.” Barbara Kingsolver
“Life is a gift; however, living life with values and principles returns the favor.” Anonymous
“Life is not about finding yourself. It is about creating yourself.” Anonymous
I love my job.
111 comments:
First!
OK - now then! I am jealous! It sounds like you have wonderful, insightful students. It must be so inspiring to read what they've written. I loved the one about getting burnt by the spotlight from the parents. Amazing insight! Thanks for sharing!
I'm having a lot of fun watching you guys with the first tag. such energy ; -))
Yeah, they mostly did real well and kept me liking my job on this one. Plus they made me hopeful that they are not going to hand the world to hell in a handbasket when I'm trying to retire someday.
That is some great stuff...what a wonderful project for the students to learn about themselves, and for you to learn even more about them. Did any of them surprise you? And it is reassuring that, in a world that has role models such as Paris Hilton or tose Jackass boys, that there are still idealists that see the work that needs to be done in the world around them.
Thanks for sharing...
WOW! I'm speechless!
thistle- it was refreshing. I don't always get to see this side of them.
SMB - If they only knew!
Oh wow, what a great post.
'(So please keep out the shout to not cut these programs)'
Yes!
Also excellent that you are providing kids with a way to express what is going on with them, in a real way.
I wish you would have been my teacher. I was being eaten alive by my home life throughout middle school and high school.
I wish a teacher would have noticed. I was so well behaved and blended in so well (which was my goal) but I think if I could have gotten some of the shame/pain out of my body and onto paper it would have really helped.
Thank you for being everything you already are, I am sure you are making a tremendous difference in their lives.
You have my encouragement to ask for your salary to be doubled.
Such inspiring words and thoughts. This is why I want to become a teacher.
I'm really impressed, not only by the thoughtfulness and talent of your students, but also by their openness. I can't imagine being that forthcoming in a school assignment at that age. At least, most kids I knew wouldn't be.
Sounds like there are a lot of really good seeds in there -- of talent, and of people who are going to make a difference.
I am so glad you shared! Many of their writings deeply touched me. What a great job you have, and what a great teacher you MUST be!
GF- I know you'll help in the shout for those programs ; -) Orchestra, marching band, and the ukulele program keeps a lot of our students happy and striving to do well (gotta make grade check).
carrie - I was like you; major issues going on at home that I never even revealed to my best friends at the time.
MAMA DAWG- I love your picture ;- )
You would be an awesome teacher. I hope you go for it.
kristan- this is a good year. I have a great group of kids who have a lot of trust and openness, and yes,a few with somemajor talent as well.
mcewan - thanks for giving me the idea.
wow. i am, seriously, crying right now. just small tears of ... just, wow. how insightful and full of promise. and encouraging to me. that our future is in the hands of people that actually, just might know what to do with it.
the part that got me, tho? 'i have so much to tell you.' that one broke my heart. i hope they find someone worthy enough to listen. (you!)
I've got chills from reading this post. Wow.
Everyone should read it.
Your students are SO fortunate to have you. And it sounds like you feel just as fortunate to have them.
You made my day.
Thank you.
XO
So moving and impressive. Just wonderful. What a great project and good for you for taking the time to assess their work.
What a cool group of kids. How many students do you have?
I'm still trying to figure out how I can type about my students and keep things private.
Love this post, Pseudo.
You and your students have renewed a little of my hope for the future.
The media might highlight the freaks, geeks and popular, but it's the ones that fall in between that will grow into responsible, respectable adults. I pray!
Em
Amazing, simply amazing words!Talk about a gratifying job!
I wrote a journal entry this past week about the fact that high school students don't make the connection between what they learn in school in real life. I also added that high school teachers need to help their students see that connection and judging by this you do that for your kids.
It almost brought tears to my eyes.
lo - me too with that one kid. she's a swret, quiet girl that you would never guess is fighting with her parents.
anna- thank-you and I do feel fortunate to do have this goup of kids.
movie -that line is hard. There were other very moving insights, but too particular for me to feel comfortable sharing, even anonymously.
eudea- you are so right. I have 146 students. The popular kids and the punks were generally not the hopeful, sensitive or deeply thoughtful students. Most of these examples are from the quiet kids, the artsy kids, the ones who try NOT to stand out in the crowd.
starlife - most of the time it is gratifying. Sometimes not so much (usually that is dealign with parents or admin)
Queenbee- sometimes the connection presents itself. But I am also an advocate of the "spinach" doctrine - as in sometimes they need the basics before you can get to the meaty, cool, connected project type things. A lot of the high school students are very spoiled and entitled and think it is our job to entertain them and if it does not, they tune us out.
Example - the students who were boycotting lessons on figurative language were not able to write very good poems when it came to the project.
The students need to trust that the boring, seemingly irrelevant stuff will connect to them later.
Wow! I really enjoyed reading this. These students who you get to reach are blessed for this opportunity. There is so much to be learned from their words. Each spring, the English teacher at my school, puts together a book of things students have written that year. The students can submit how ever many they want. She then makes a book of all the submissions. They have a choice of being anonymous or having their name behind their writings. The students are very proud of their work. Each year I read it and cry. It's beautiful and I feel that all parents should read this and take these things to heart.
You are a great teacher...touching lives more than you will ever know. Thank you for all that you do!
I love teaching because the students are still capable of showing their hearts--if you dare to ask and to make them feel safe. You, truly, have made a wonderful safe place for them, and you have made the paper a safe place for them. What a gift.
smiles and laura- yes, these are the good days and good moments of teaching.
What a wonderful post, so full of hope and promise. My boyfriend is also a HS teacher (music) and he is proud of "his kids" and how they are all good kids, although like most teenagers they have to play at "being cool" all the time, so when they share like this it is always astounding, and equally promising.
You are obviously a great teacher for those children to feel that they can be so open with you and trust you so much. Kudos to you for bringing out what is usually there in young hearts (though they may be well buried)
Wow. I incredibly impressed with your students (and more so because they hail from HI :)
Thank you so much for stopping by my blog today and commenting. It's been great to open the door to people I never knew existed. Including my own home state! :)
There's another blogger Maki who hailed from Oahu but moved to Florida that I blog friend with :)
Aloha!
wow. it's moments in teaching like these that make you wish you could teach forever.
you have some amazing students.
As a mother of small children I love the insight you gave me into the hearts of teenagers. Thanks - and happy SITS day.
I have chills.
My favs - the only child and the hero's fall from grace.
Absolutely amazing.
Congrats on being a featured blogger. It is well deserved.
Hi stopping by from SITS to say congrats on Featured Blogger! I was a high school English teacher for 2 years before my kids came along. Now I'm on permanent maternity leave! You've got some profound thinkers and talented writers in your class! This image blew me away :Growing up an only child, I got sunburned from the spotlight that my parents always shined on me.
As did the imagery in the poem about sleeping through middle school. Seems like a great project. Keep up the good work!
Wonderful... thanks for sharing!
Fantastic post! It was always an eye opener for me to read essays my kids wrote when they were that age; the things I thought they hated me for, they actually appreciated.
And I totally agree on the importance of extra-curricular activities. What a difference that makes.
Happy SITS Day!
Dropping by from SITS...It looks like you have an amazing bunch of students. Thank you for sharing this post with us. :)
What a great post, thank for sharing it!! Stopping by from SITS to say HI!!
Wow what a rewarding profession! Loved your post!
Wow, how wonderful. It's so redeeming as a teacher when students really step up!
Wow. You are making an impact on your student's lives! Happy SITs day.
What an impressive group of kids! Very inspiring!
The amount of trust your students have in you is astounding. At your grade level, that is a hard thing to establish.
Amazing. Sometimes we forgot, or just don't realize how wise and insightful teenagers are capable of being.
Thanks for sharing. Enjoy the spotlight today.
I can tell you are really making a difference in the lives of these kids. Thanks for sharing.
carma
Happy SITS Day! I love this entry! As the mother of 2 teenagers & an 11 year old, this insight into the lives of their peers is so interesting. It also reinforces how important it is to be a positive influence on your teens, although they may seem like they don't care, they do more than you know.
Happy SITS day! As Mom to an 11th grader, I really enjoyed reading this post. We saw with our own daughter all the value, morals, etc. come through in her essays also.
It is great to see students that reflect in a positive way.
Incredible stories. Teens are so much more than the stereotypes. Thank you for sharing. And congrats on your SITS day!
Coming from a parent of a ninth grader, that sounds like such a great project - I hope my daughter gets a chance to participate in something like this one day.
Very impressive.
My 6th graders are not this insightful, but assignments like this make me love my job, too!
It's this kind of stuff that makes me miss teaching high school. Good for you giving them an assignment about which they could care.
Wow, it is wonderful to hear such insight into a teenager's mind.
Wow!! What an amazing teacher you are. You ask your students to think beyond what is conventional and make them really look inside. For your students to really respond so well shows what an inspirational teacher you are. Thank you for sharing these amazing stories. Maridith
don't you love those moments that make all the other stuff worth it? I do wish my 10th graders wrote even half as well as yours do.
I love your job too! If I would have been a teacher it would have been English...it was by far my favorite and best subject. You have some talent in your class for sure! Happy SITS day!
Wow - I am deeply touched by this unexpected insight into todays teen. It gives me a little bit more hope for what they will bring to our future!
Stopping by from SITS! Those were awesome! Thanks for sharing!
Obviously you have a great bunch of kids, and you are a great teacher. Who cares enough to read what they write.
You're the kind of teacher I hope every student gets to experience.
What wonderful students!
You sound like a great teacher!
Happy SITS Day!! Wow, what an enlightening assignment - very authentic. Both joyful and heartbreaking, but that indeed is life isn't it? Thanks for sharing.
WOW. All I can say, is wow. It is amazing what people, especially young people will say if they know you will listen. Thanks for the enlightenment, I loved this.
Happy SITS day!
Wow. How powerful ... and truly inspiring. Loved it.
Winks & Smiles,
Wifey
Those are some very talented students.
Happy SITS day!
Wow!! That project is amazing and inspiring. Thank you so much for sharing some of the talented work your students shared with you.
You have amazing students!
Wonderful. So glad you shared!
I hope some of your students credited you for clearly inspiring them. It's hard to be so candid about your life, your students must feel close to you and have great amount of respect for you!
What a great assignment. I loved getting the assignments that were so introspective. Not many HS students actually take the time to look into themselves and note how they have grown and developed into the person they have now become. One of my favorite assignments was similar to this one, and I loved it.
Sounds like a great group of students. You sound like you have a really rewarding job!
as a parent of 4 ranging in ages from 11-5, your post give me hope that what I am doing with them now will continue to be of improtance in another couple if years.
Wow. It's refreshing to hear such insightful thoughts from kids this age. Great assignment! I bet your kids think you're a wonderful teacher!
Thanks for sharing that, it was really enlightening. My oldest is 14 but as a whole I think kids this age are such a mystery to me. It must be wonderful to get that window in to their thoughts and feelings. They sound like a great group.
your students are very good writers. They must have a good teacher. :)
Right after college, I tried teaching 10th grade English and learned that it wasn't for me. It is obvious that you are where you are meant to be.
Your students are so talented. Thanks for sharing their work with us.
It's good to know they eventually catch on. I teach 8th grade now, and I worry on a daily basis if they're going to be able to handle it one day. Your students show that maybe it just takes a little time. Thanks for sharing.
So much talent there! Just amazing! I can see why you love your job!
Coming over from SITS! Enjoy your day!
What amazing thoughts. I can see why you feel lucky!
What group of talented kids!
Happy SITS Day!
Sounds like you have some great students on your hand...so smart & insightful!! Lucky you. Love this post because it opens up our eyes too.
Happy SITS day!
Jamie :-)
Amazing! I hope my children have such inspiring teachers when they hit that age.
Wonderful post! Congrats on your SITS day! Well deserved. :)
Sounds like you have great kids.
It's good to hear some of the insights - I'm trying to learn all I can to parent my son well.
WOW! what an amazing post!!! Kids are truly amazing. I've had the opportunity to help kids write and publish their stories and I'm always humbled and amazed by them...thanks for sharing this beautiful post!!!
Wow, I can truly feel how much you care about your students...and I'm sure they know, too!
How profound - all of it. I worked in a HS age youth group as an Advisor. They are not all shallow and emotionless. They can offer words that we as adults can learn from...
You sound like an amazing teacher! It's wonderful that you can share and also learn so much from your students.
What a fab teacher you must be! Happy SITS day!
Happy SITS day ... congrats on being featured. That post was so different from what I'm used to reading and it was refreshing and inspiring to see how amazing kids are ...
Great post and over-all blog!
I loved this post....thanks for sharing. It is amazing to me how deep teens are, if we would just listen...take the time to actually HEAR them. I have a 12 (almost 13) year old, and when we are in the car, we really talk...well...she talks, I listen. I am so delighted and enthralled to hear her deep thoughts and her perspectives...hearing her share makes me want to dig deeper into life....
It makes me happy to read things like this. It shows that not all teenagers are drug-crazed, alcoholic, mean, ungrateful hooligans like so many portray them to be. These kids have a heart and soul just like us and we adults would do well to listen to their stories and walk our path a little more lightly than we do.
Your students are very lucky to have a teacher like you.
It sounds like you has some inspirating writings from your students. It is nice to know that they think of their world on a much grander scale. You are lucky to work with such insightful young adults.
I'm impressed by the amount of thought and work that obviously went into your students' work. That must be very rewarding!
Those kids of yours are smart, wise cookies for their age. :o)
Congrats on your SITS feature!
Wow! Good writers & thinkers for such a young age.
Amazing. Just when you think kids don't understand anything, they really do. They get it. You are commended for creating an environment where they feel safe and valued in sharing with you their innermost thoughts, joys, feelings an fears.
Makes me want to be in High School all over again!
Happy SITS Day!
wow that is amazing. children, no matter the age, have so much to share with us, if we would only take the time to listen.
happy SITS day
Wow... I don't think I was nearly that insightful at that age. Those are some overly(?) wise students there. I'm really impressed -- and heartened for tomorrow.
Wow, it sounds like you are and amazing teacher with some amazing students. Very inspiring.
As someone who is currently looking for my first teaching job, this post really inspired me. Thank you so much, it really gives me hope for truth and thought from a generation of students who always seem more interested in video games, texting and selfish things. It's refreshing to see such insight and honesty.
Thank you, SITSta :)
So inspiring!!! Thanks for posting this! Love ya SITSta
I really love hearing all of your teaching stories. Congrats on being the featured blogger.
Those are some deep poems. The one about sleep and also the one about the parent who fell from grace made me stop and think for a minute. Beautiful stuff from high schoolers.
Sounds like a great project. Too many times we look at the funky clothes and wild hair and make our assumptions before we actually look at these kids and get to know them a bit. They're a lot deeper than we give them credit for.
So glad to come by and read such a wonderful post about your kids. I'm a day late but congrats on being featured!
I love your job! I can't wait to graduate so I can do the same thing! What an inspiration you and your students are
I appreciate hearing positive remarks about teaching, and about our young people, considering how much negativity there are about both subjects, far too often. The students' poems were inspiring. You are truly blessed! Hope you continue to love your job.
Incredible.
People don't give kids enough credit sometimes. Thanks for sharing! Happy SITS day!
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