Having just worked for a straight year teaching Grade 8s in an "inner city" school in Toronto, I now find myself with the unenviable position of having to wait for a call to work. I often dread the call as much as I want my cell to ring. Where will they send me? What will the kids be like? Will it be for the whole day? The comfortable monotony of knowing where I will be driving and knowing where to pick up the students and knowing how many people are allowed to go to the bathroom at one time and whether boys have to be paired with boys, or, no Mr. Dafos, a boy can go to the bathroom with a girl, they just have to wait for each other so that they come back together. Sigh.
For a supply teacher, it really is a war zone at time: so many new faces, all of them looking at you with disdain and painful apathy. Day plans by teachers who just assume that you'll magically understand where Entrance 4 is when there are no signs signalling the entrances to the school. Day plans that are written in grade 3-esque chicken scratch, where arrows signify "oops, do this activity here instead of here." And my favourite day plans that advise: "see Ms. Latimer for worksheets." Who is Latimer, where do I find her, and why aren't the worksheets here on the desk so that I don't have to rake through the school looking for her?
Since I can't ask the teacher what they meant by this symbol and what that word says and where this exit is, my first plan of attack (to keep the war zone metaphor going) is to diffuse the student body. I know that most of these kids lick their lips upon the first glance of a supply teacher. I also know that they are met with disdain and scornful looks from the supply teacher. The relationship for both bodies (students and teacher) is typical: "if the kids work or not isn't worth worrying about because I'll never have to see them again; their not my students anyway" and "This is a chance to let out some craziness on this schmuck."
What I do first as students walk in is smile. Not a "oh, I'm so happy to see you" kind of smile which the students will find suspect...and, well, bloody lame. I put on a clever, knowing smile, I soften my eyes, I relax my whole body and make sure I say "How are you buddy," "How's it goin'?" and "Welcome" to the students I know might normally give me a hard time. My voice pitch is low, measured, controlled. I show them that I'm calm and usually by default, they too become calm. The excitement of attacking the enemy neutralizes for most of them. I breath deeply, down from my belly, before I say anything, all the while smiling and remaining silent. I look at them all. As they are settling down, I will walk over to the tribe leader and ask "Who's the real trouble maker?" I ask with a wry grin on my face - that grin becomes his grin quite quickly. My knowing eyes become his knowing eyes. We're in on this together now. And yes, it's usually a boy.
From there, I thank people for any sign of positivity. Thank you for giving me your attention. Thanks for holding that thought till later. Thanks for getting to work. Thanks for helping me out. The thank yous are also evenly measured and they sweep from left to right usually. What's quite interesting to see is how one thank you relaxes and focuses and even makes the others sit up straighter. I turn my attention to these students and smile, knowing that - there it is! - they'll look at me to see if I noticed their shift in behaviour. And my smile becomes their smile.
When someone demonstrates an act of insurgency, I say nothing to them. I look them in the eyes, lower my outstretched hand to signal that they sit down (sometimes with a "I know you want to get out of your seat but not right now" kind of frown on my face). The best is putting your palms together and making as if you're begging them to get to work without saying anything. I've gotten so used to watching students give up, sit down, and get back to work.
What I'm doing is asking for compliance by saying as few words as possible. I remain in control of my posture. I don't shout. I smile and breath deeply. I look everyone in the eyes. I react to nothing. My voice is measured, my pitch low, my words purposeful, meaningful. My focus is making sure most everyone is relaxed, smiling, sitting. Even if they're not working, at least their not battling. I'm a lighthouse, a beacon, and (dare I quote) even "cool." Then can I start throwing in some self-deprecating humour to get everyone laughing and feeling even more comfortable. I tell stories about my childhood, and they respond with stories of their own ("connections," as we call them in teacherspeak).
I was in a school in Ajax, lower middle-class area, tougher Grade 7s and 8s. By using my lighthouse strategy I got this kid to write some answers to his mandatory reading comprehension test just by listening to him, answering his questions, and encouraging him to recognize that he could write even though he hated writing. This was the second day he had that test in his hands and today, with a supply teacher, did he finally write something down - something of intelligence, might I add. I had the student teacher who I was working with say to me after: "Wow, you got M. to sit down and write. I've never seen these kids respond to a supply teacher the way they did."
I just softly gazed at her, smiled a knowing smile, and nodded on the next exhalation.