When I first graduated from college I got a job teaching PE at a pretty good sized Christian School in California. I was hired to teach Kindergarten through 2nd grade PE. It was only three days a week but it was the worst job I ever had. I learned that I am not cut out for working with kids that age. I wanted to shoot myself in the foot about half way through the year. I had had ENOUGH. I am still tainted to this day. I can only be around kids that age for about five minutes before I get a nervous tic. One of the upsides to the job was I got to run around and play every day, the other upside was Greg. Greg was a kindergartner in the "special class." Greg's classmates were, for lack of a better word, insane. Greg was a diagnosed mute. He would not talk to adults. His teacher warned me of this, and told me if I needed an answer from him for some reason to go through Nick, his buddy who would talk for him. The first day of class, Greg growled at me. Not a mean growl, just kind of a friendly RAWR.
I treated him like the rest of the kids. When he was a little punk, he got time out, when he was good, I let him know it. I started calling him Greg Bub and I called Nick, Nick Bub. I'm not real sure where that came from, but when I would call him that he would grin and give me a rawr. One day after Christmas break, I was handing out frisbees to groups of two. Greg and Nick came up and I asked them what color frisbee they wanted. Greg looked right at me and said, "Blue! Blue!" I handed him a blue frisbee, and they went on their merry way. I never made a big deal of Greg talking to me, but from that day on we would have conversations. He started calling me Cam Bub.
I got to meet his mom towards the end of the year at Field Day. She went on to tell me that I was one of the 7 adults in Greg's life that he talked to. All we could figure is that I was probably in the most "non-threatening" environment at school and all we did was play. I look pretty young for my age so that could have been part of it. Greg's teacher ended up asking me if I would give him his end of the year oral test. He was a very smart kid. He just didn't want to talk. He must have had some amazing willpower to not talk to his teacher all year long, not one word.
Saturday, December 15, 2007
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2 comments:
Never underestimate the power of a good teacher.
Something to be proud of and well-written,to boot.
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