Tag Archives: high school

35 Years of Marriage–Year 17

This collection of stories is an anniversary gift to my husband of 35 years–one story for each year. Our 17th year was one of significant change. For nearly two decades, we both taught science at the same high school which we loved, and this was the year we changed districts, schools, and subjects.

After closure of Fort Ord, Seaside and Marina became ghost towns, and after years of signing transfer sheets for students who were moving, and years of dwindling course selections offered at our high school, and most importantly, years of declining income while our family expenses climbed, we made a decision. Eighteen years we taught at Seaside High, at a school, faculty and staff we loved, but we needed to move.

1999 was our last year teaching at Seaside. Whenever we mentioned we taught at Seaside, the usual reaction was,

“Oh my god, aren’t you scared of getting shot?”

“Aren’t you afraid of working there?”

“Wow, you’re brave.”

Public impression was we risked our lives to go to work. It was never like that. Students were sweet and respectful, and we figured we’d retire from that district.

Seaside students came from all over the world, sons and daughters of military personnel stationed on the Fort Ord Base. Seaside High (chanted in a deep voice with emphasis on “side,” as in “see-SIDE”) pooled together a fascinating combination of genes–Samoan/African-American, African-American/Asian, etc.  During the 1980s (heck, even now), the government expected teachers to count ethnicities within our classes. Seriously? Seriously. Of course, data recorded on scantrons, determined federal funds the school received, so we took this assignment seriously.

1999 was our first year teaching at Salinas High, John Steinbeck’s alma mater, and different from Seaside in many ways. 2600 kids attended, nearly 1000 more than at Seaside. Salinas lacked the diversity of Seaside; it seemed as if only two groups attended–farmers’ kids or farm-workers’ kids. Think of pre-packaged lettuce to chase the money. The “show-case school” of the district possessed beautiful architecture and strong history in town. Football games were the biggest (usually only) thing on Friday nights; parents and grandparents, mostly alums of Salinas or neighboring Catholic schools filled the stadium. Lots of “intermarriages” between Salinas High and Palma/Notre Dame alums, which made for exciting and packed volleyball, basketball, and football games.

That year, there was no welcome for new staff, rather colleagues demanded to know your stand on school issues, your stand with admin, etc. We left a school we cherished and moved into a scorching hot bed of politics, faculty taking pride in the rapid turn-over of administrators. I walked a thin line that school year–really three years until I had tenure. To say it was difficult to find friends on staff is an understatement, but we “first-year teachers” found solace in each other. And though I had taught 24 years, it felt like my first. I mourned the loss of our other school, eventually “found my way,” and celebrated that I worked at the same school of our oldest. Not just the same school, as a result of shuffling in the master schedule, daughter M. “landed” in my biology class.

Many in her class recognized me as the “science specialist” from their past elementary school.

“Hey, I remember you. You came to our class and we dissected owl pellets.”

Of course, that was then, ungraded and fun, this was now, graded and work. On the other hand, the class embraced the schedule change and me, which made the changes (districts, schools, subjects, and classes) worth it. Except for poor M.

I explained to my second period class. “M. is my daughter. She won’t call me Mrs. Harrison. She can call me Mom. If you call me that too, it’s okay.”

The class laughed and nodded agreement. Made perfect sense, still daughter M. avoided addressing me for that entire year.

In Memory of Matilda

I have not written in weeks—no time, no energy, no desire until this morning. My first period entered loudly as they always do, most of them slurping Monster for breakfast, and those who do not suck up Starbucks espresso. I have a cup of coffee to match their energy, but today was a little different. Adrien was gone all of last week at the Salinas County Fair and he returned solemn as though he lost his best friend. I get it. Fifteen-year-old Adrien raised a pig and sold it on Sunday. I asked if he said his goodbyes and he started to tear up and then I started to tear up and then the entire class hushed to hear our stories.

Me: I remember our family’s first pig. The night before we sold Brutus (appropriate as we are studying Julius Caesar), I cried. Our children did not cry until after the auction, when the truck pulled up and the pigs were marked with spray paint to determine their final destination, but I cried the night before. It was just as well, since I had serious consoling to do after the auction.

Adrian: (tears in his eyes, but thankfully, not on his cheeks) She was a great pig. I called her Matilda. She ran around, barked, and barked whenever she saw me. I fed her the last meal, and when I turned to walk away, she barked some more. She never did that before. (Now, the tears were on his cheeks.)

Me: I am sorry. I completely understand. Pigs are amazing creatures—so intelligent, certainly much smarter than sheep (hoping to get a smile).

Adrien: Yeah, she knew me. We had great times together. I tattooed her name on my arm so I will always remember her.

Adrian unveiled the scripted, black inked Matilda on his forearm. Priceless.

Okay, time to get to studies like Julius Caesar. I love this class. I am going to miss them. We bonded in the same way Adrian did with his Matilda (not that I should compare a class of sophomores to a pen of pigs—well, maybe). I am going to miss the way we seamlessly move from a sob story to laughter to somber discussion. This seldom happens, but when it happens, it is as indelible as a tattoo on the mind or heart.

31 Years of Memories–Year 12

31 Years of Memories—Year 12

12/28/1992 – 12/28/93

Sam was 1-year-old, Allie 4, Meghan 7, Dale 42, me 38, and Fort Ord 75 years old and the base was closing. Congress warned in the “Base Realignment and Closure Act” that closure of Fort Ord was imminent. In response, our school district initially did the responsible thing and generated a list of employees, their priority numbers based on year hired and subjects taught. The lists hung on public bulletin boards near bathrooms, in teacher lounges, next to mailboxes or in mailboxes, on any available space on campus. It was the first question asked when you met someone.

“Hi, so, where are you on the list?” or “Hi, what’s your number?”—so GATACCA-like in nature.

To which the ubiquitous response was “Oh, I already have a job in ______________” or “I am safe. They won’t get rid of math or science teachers” (implying that these lucky people were more valuable that the rest).

To which the usual reply was “Oh, yeah, sorry, about that and good luck on the job search” or “Wow, yeah, you’re in a good place.”

Dale and I were momentarily safe, yet the stress on our family was as insidious as a cancer diagnosis with its impending treatment. We were only “safe” until the next CAT scan or PET scan, or in our case, the updated list. No one knew exactly what effect the departure of 22,000 troops would have on local schools and businesses, but there was plenty of speculation.

We had seen the army come and go with a variety of deployments. In 1989, the seventh IDL deployed to Panama to restore order and then captured, Dictator Manuel Noriega. In 1990, the seventh IDL joined the coalition troops in the Middle East to defeat Iraq during Desert Storm. One of the last deployments was to quell the 1992 Los Angeles-Rodney King riots. Each time, when Congress called out the Cavalry, it took its toll on our students, most of whom cried for days while we consoled and tried to teach them. Often, bomb threats to the campus accompanied the deployments, as though students had anything to do with the government decisions. The bomb scares were nerve-wracking distractions as we stood in evacuation lines for an hour or so, until the military police secured the campus.

So, we were familiar with the military response, but nothing prepared us (and the school district) with the rapidity the military used for the base evacuation. The day after the government announcement, oversize eighteen-wheelers carted off military mobile homes to God-knows-where. Each day, three to five students submitted transfer requests; my average class enrollment of thirty dropped to five students. Our district could do nothing. Teachers signed contracts in September at the beginning of the school year and Congress decided in October to close the base. Every teacher remained in class, regardless of student enrollment, while school funds plummeted with ADA (average daily attendance) as over 500 students dropped to Germany, Hawaii, Korea, or wherever the military sent its troops and their families. We began the year with over 1300 students and ended with barely 400. Dale and I survived for this year.

I jogged, during my fourth period prep, through the ghost town of a base. No sounds from abandoned homes, no evidence of life, no evidence of succession in that first year. It was a significant year of change for all of us.

Astronomy Campout in Yosemite

Every summer, my husband and I (both of us being high school teachers) pack tent and camp gear and head to state or national parks. When our children were young (starting as early as 6 weeks), we roamed from park to park, with our favorite sites in Yellowstone, Yosemite, Grover Hot Springs, Hendy Woods, Big Sur, and Big Basin. In fall, we camped most often in Yosemite, when the crowds are gone and the weather is not yet winter. At times, a smoky haze hovered over the pine trees from controlled burns in the valley. Other Novembers, we camped in crisp, clean air, our tents on the light snow covering pine needles. I recently returned from Yosemite, this time with high school students, some of whom had never camped.
At the start, this trip did not bode well as everyone was sick from whatever virus was spreading through the high school. We were a band of barking dogs, hacking all the way to the mountains, but Yosemite was calling. Nothing, no insidious virus, would stand in the way of this trip. Immediately after school on Friday afternoon, my colleague and I packed the school vans for the four-hour trek to Yosemite Valley. Stuffed into a decrepit, public school extended van, with no functioning radio (Imagine this with high school kids–really?), filled with camp food and supplies for two days plus behemoth telescope, as this was the astronomy club trip, we pulled into the campsite by 8:00 p.m. and managed to set up tents within the half hour—truly a challenge in the dark and with unfamiliar tents.
We fired up the Coleman stove for hot chocolate, a necessity before sleep. Everyone was out by 10:00 and truly, I mean asleep. No sounds from adjoining tents I was monitoring, until my cough medicine took over and I began to drift off. However, it was a fretful night as I darn near froze, too cold to find the car key to find my other jacket, so I huddled deep inside the length of the down sleeping bag. Even woolen cap, long underwear, fleece pants, down jacket were insufficient, so I shivered out the night until morning. On the other hand, freezing cold is part of the entire experience. The next morning after breakfast, we hiked the John Muir trail to Vernal-Nevada Falls and returned via the horse trail. The hacking, coughing, wheezing, and sneezing teenagers and chaperons pushed up the steep trail, but not sick enough to enjoy the vibrant colors, Sienna, Indian Reds, Orange Red to Maroon and every shade in between. The colors were practically therapeutic.
Following the day’s hike and dinner by campfire, we held an obligatory stroll to the open meadows at 10:00 p.m. This was an astronomy club outing after all, so we sprawled in the meadow gazing at the celestial heavens, as my colleague pointed out constellations, circumpolar stars, and the faint Andromeda galaxy. Returning to site, everyone finished off the hot chocolate while I swigged my NyQuil, determined to get a better night’s sleep than the evening before. That is, of course, when disaster hit. My colleague with an absolute stricken look on his face confessed that he had misplaced the single school van key. I immediately began to think of possible scenarios—ranging from AAA rescue to a-most-pissed-off administrator-driving-the-four-hours to our site. None of the scenarios was especially pleasant. And, that is how I fell asleep, as the second night of camping is always the soundest in terms of sleep. Something about figuring out the best sleeping position in a bag, or adjusting to the surrounding sounds and dim lights, or relaxing to the campfire smells, but this particular night it was the double dose of cough medicine that did it.
My poor partner, Philip, scoured the campsite, then retraced our steps, and trekked through the meadow disturbing lovers and wild beasts for the small key attached to nothing at all. Whoever hands a single key without even a twist-tie? School districts, apparently. As Philip informed me the next morning, I was “unconscious” by the time he returned to our campsite. True. If a black bear had decided to sample my cough medicine, I never would have known. In fact, if a black bear sampled me, I would not have noticed. Philip found the singular key in the bottom of a jacket, which he never took off after that moment.
The next morning after a heavy night of needed sleep and my cough finally dissipating, I drove back, and the sole sound in the van was snoring from all the students and Philip.

Priceless Work

Every so often, I get the opportunity to be a counselor to my students, a role I relish beyond that of teacher. In a school of 2600 students, it is inevitable that some students do not land where they should without additional direction or support.  I remember Christine, a level 10 state champion, whose counselor never mentioned the NCAA registration because he did not know she was a gymnast.  Then Christine’s gymnastics coach never mentioned the NCAA either because he assumed the counselor at the high school would. Being Christine’s biology teacher and mother to a fellow gymnast, I assumed either coach or counselor directed the NCAA registration, until I asked her how the scouting was going.

“Terrible,” Christine replied, “I made videos of my routines, and no one has contacted me, but I have the grades and SAT scores to qualify at the Division I schools.”

“You know that NCAA coaches cannot approach you until that recruitment time of year and you registered, right?”

“Huh?” I still recall the blank expression on her face as I discussed this with her.

“Oh, you are not registered with NCAA. Forget biology for today,” (which I would never say but did on this day) and sent Christine to the library with instructions on NCAA registration.  Two weeks later, Christine had numerous recruitment letters and within one month, scholarship offers at Division I schools. She is now in her third year of competing in college.

Christine’s story does not happen often, thankfully, as we succeed with more students than not. This year, however, I scored another opportunity to be a counselor.  R., in my period six class, is a brilliant young man with spectacular talent on a stage.  A stellar grade point average (3.8), a budding playwright, and winner of Thespian awards at the state level, yet R., just as with Christine, somehow did not get the message that college is an option. R. did not get this message because he is different—not a team sport player or NHS member or CSF member, but a Thespian—creative but often not college material.

This afternoon, I directed R. to explore CSU Mentor, choosing from different options—location in California, school size, subject major—to R.’s overwhelming delight he is a perfect match for San Francisco State. Smiling as though he won the Super Lotto, R. stated repeatedly in a theatrical voice over (again repeatedly), “I am in the top 1% of all applicants.” He could not believe the online calculations, as though if he told me enough, he might eventually believe himself.  R. is now applying to SFSU, even U.C.L.A. is an option. Shooting for the moon and the stars, it is a good thing R. finished his personal statement. Tomorrow night is the opening of the play he wrote about Sherlock Holmes and performed by the repertory theatre. As R. left my class today, he turned to me and promised, “You will get a signed copy of the script.” I will be there. I will be ecstatic for him next spring when acceptance letters arrive. I know that R. is on his way to outer space and to where the stars shine. He belongs there.

Some people collect yachts or mansions or fancy cars or famous artwork or signed sculptures. I collect student work. Some day my work will be priceless.

Oh, yeah. It already is.