Often I am asked why I became a
teacher. When I am on interviews or having a casual conversation, people
ask me about my career choice. I give many reasons each time I answer
that question. One answer I give remains constant among the rest.
I love school.
It is that
simple. I LOVE SCHOOL. I love being in school. I love thinking
about school. I love looking at all the
neat books, posters, gadgets, and furniture in a classroom. I love lectures, discussions, and
seminars. I love all that fine and noble
learning that goes with school.
There is not a subject in school that
does not interest me. If I had the time and money, I would get a degree
in every academic subject. Being among books and students elevates me. Indeed, I have three degrees now. That is
not nearly enough. Were I a thermometer,
I would want more and more and more degrees.
I love the pep
rallies, clubs, ball games, teacher collaboration, and meaningful professional
development. When the basketball coach at Tyner Academy in Chattanooga
told me that he could not find enough teachers to sell tickets for the junior
varsity games, I volunteered to work every game. He was so grateful, but for me, it was what
my grandmother would call a hoot and a holler.
Educators and students are among the
most interesting people I have ever known anywhere. Just about everyone else becomes boring after
an hour or so.
When I was in
elementary school, I loved to hear Mr. Mayberry, the principal, tell Jack tales
in the school auditorium. He never told
the same story twice. When Mrs. Fowler
read Where the Red Fern Grows, we
begged her to read it to us again and again.
Junior High thrilled me. Our football team went undefeated for the
first time in school history. The
cafeteria staff served pizza for lunch, something I had never eaten
before. There were sock hops and science
fairs. I had seven different teachers
each day.
Mr. Clark, my eighth grade math
teacher, was a preacher. He stood tall
and thin like Abraham Lincoln. I placed
fake vomit near his desk once and poured water over it so it would look
real. He seemed to know right away who did
it. He smiled all the way to the
principal’s office with me in tow by the ear.
My senior year in high school was the
best. I was elected a Senior Superlative. My classmates elected me as Most School Spirit. I won the Lion’s Club scholarship. It was obvious to everyone that I had more
fun in high school, learned more in high school, than any other place in
town.
I played varsity football in high
school. I still dream of the wet grass sticking to my shins, gathering
into green tufts among the laces on my cleats.
I hear pads popping, helmets hammering, gang tacklers grunting, and the
band blasting our school fight song while cheerleaders are shouting, “Let’s go
Lions!”
In dreams, I see Coach Weathers on the
sidelines looking as imposing as Bear Bryant.
He barks plays into a running back’s ear. Coach Cotter signals formations with deft
hand movements. Coach Bishop yells at a
lineman who missed a block. Coach Smith
praises a running back who made a first down.
We had a great team that year and a lot of school pride. I played on one of the best defenses in the
state. I believe we still have the
record for the longest game and most overtimes in Hamilton County.
I still dream of my school. Red Bank High School was an old red brick building
with radiators that clanked and clunked in the winter. The handles were hot and they hissed when
Mrs. Wharton, my French teacher, or Mrs. Gault, my English teacher, turned them
off because the room was too stuffy for breathing. In late spring and early autumn, the air conditioners
jutting out of the windows roared and rumbled so loudly the teachers unplugged
them. They pulled the lower windows open
by their gray, metal handles, and they pushed the upper windows out with yardsticks.
When I was in school, we did not suffer
the torrid, insufferable heat wave of August.
School began in September, the Tuesday after Labor Day. By the second week of school, all the windows
were opened and those invigorating autumn breezes lifted stray sheets of notebook
paper atop cream colored, laminated desktops.
I played
clarinet in my junior high band. My love for classical music
started in 7th grade. In 9th
grade, I practiced over and over to play perfectly the plaintive adagio of Air for Strings in G by Bach. Mr. Cassavant fussed
when a note was tardy or early.
Mr. Bell, my high school band
director, taught us Sousa, Duke Ellington, and Chicago. I learned to
march, but never got to perform during football season. However, I played alto clarinet in the All Region
band. I love just about every kind of
music there is today because of band. There is no greater learning than
that.
My best
friends were among the band members. They were the coolest.
Although I was a jock, and some of my friends were jocks, the most
laughter and fun I experienced came from the percussion, brass, and woodwind
sections.
So this blog
is for school and everything there to be loved and summoned up forever in
dreams. This blog is for those who love learning, who learn until the day
they die, and who transmit their love for learning to their own students.
You are my audience. Peer, colleague, student, or former student: we are on the same journey as seekers of
discovery for the sake of being astonished.
Here’s hoping my blog helps us all
continue to love learning while never leaving school.