Hello All:
When I was a kid on summer break I used to hate it when I’d
see the first sign of school about to resume. This usually came as an ad in the
newspaper with the heading, “Back to School!” Or maybe I’d be at the store with
my mother where we’d pass an aisle that had a large sign hanging from the
ceiling that read, “Back to School!” A glance down the aisle revealed those
God-awful school supplies that the teacher would expect us to use in the
upcoming school year.
Well, it’s August which means summer vacation will end in
a few weeks for all the kids. As a parent, I now like to tease my youngest daughter
by pointing out these unpleasant back-to-school reminders. I might chime the
words, “Back to School!” while holding up a Walmart ad with a “Back to School”
sale.
***
Hopefully your kids won’t have a teacher like the main
character in today’s featured writing. Have a great weekend. Enjoy it while it
lasts… before the kids go back to school!
Back to School
There are two recesses at Valley
Grammar School. Well, actually in the kids' world, there are three if you count
arriving at school for the day and playing on the playground before class
begins. Then the kids must endure a couple hours of sitting in their desks and
learning lessons from the teacher who stands at the chalkboard. At ten o'clock
they are permitted to eat a small snack at their desks in an allotted time
frame of five minutes before morning recess begins. Then the kids rush out for
ten minutes for some much needed play.
It was a Tuesday morning around
quarter to eleven, about a half hour after recess. Every morning at this time,
Mrs. Lynch's first grade class did an exercise of reading a short story from
the reading text book. Each student was to take a turn reading out loud—maybe a
few sentences or so from the book—until the story was complete.
"Come-on Brian, pronounce
the word!" demanded Mrs. Lynch. She was growing impatient with students
like him. He was slow with poor reading skills.
"S... S... So... W... W...
W... H...O" Bryan struggled through every word.
"Bryan, is that all you can
do?" complained Mrs. Lynch. "You can't even read a simple phrase, 'so
who...?'" Then she mocked poor Bryan in such a way to make him appear to
be a stupid retard. "This is you! S... S... O.... Uh... Hu... S." She
was sure to make a dopey look on her face. "I mean what's so hard about
it?"
Mrs. Lynch nosily exhaled and
ordered little Susan to continue.
"so who took the cookie from the cookie
jar?" Susan read. Although read perfectly, little Susan was shy
and bashful. She was terribly soft-spoken and it was difficult to hear her.
Mrs. Lynch proceeded to mock
Susan. "You sound like a little mouse on its dying breath." Then she
whispered softly like little Susan, "so who took the cookie from the cookie jar?"
While doing so, she made a sad face which clearly exhibited the way Susan read.
The entire classroom laughed.
Heather, perhaps the smartest
kid in class and seemingly the teacher's pet chimed in, "I like it when
you imitate people. It keeps everyone laughing."
"Oh really?"
challenged Mrs. Lynch. "Here let me impersonate you." Mrs. Lynch
proceeded to skip across the front of the room over to the teacher's desk.
"Good morning Mrs. Lynch." She used an exaggerated voice in a
somewhat cruel tone which was aimed to mock Heather. "You have a nice
dress today. You look nice. Can I be your special student... your teacher’s
pet?"
All the kids in the class
laughed, including Heather who clearly didn't have a problem with laughing at
herself.
"You like that, huh
Heather?" asked Mrs. Lynch.
Heather nodded in affirmation as
her laughter calmed down.
"Well what about me?" encouraged
Mrs. Lynch. "Doesn't anyone want to impersonate me?"
Heather immediately offered,
"I will!" She stood up from her desk and scurried over to the
blackboard where she picked up a piece of chalk. "Okay boys and girls, we
need to learn how to pronounce letters correctly." Heather drew the letter
R on the blackboard.
Mrs. Lynch stood some distance
away and observed in silence.
"And so boys and girls,
what is this letter?" asked Heather who was acting out Mrs. Lynch.
"R!" answered the entire
class.
"Good!" congratulated
Heather who, for some reason, was able to imitate Mrs. Lynch's voice quite
well. "And how do you pronounce it?"
"RRRRRR!" answered the
class. This was certainly a fun game. Mrs. Lynch wasn't such a bad teacher
after all.
Heather was able to impersonate
Mrs. Lynch so well that she even stretched her neck out while partly bowing to
correct the students. "URRRRRRRRRR!"
she answered in correction.
All the kids in the classroom
laughed. Heather sounded just like Mrs. Lynch. She even exhibited the same
gestures and body motion while pretending to teach the class.
But unlike the kids in the
class, Mrs. Lynch was not laughing. She grew all the more silently outraged
until finally speaking, "Wow, Heather! That's good! How did you learn how
to do that?"
Heather smiled and shrugged her
shoulders.
"It looks like you've had a
lot practice." pointed Mrs. Lynch. "Is this what you do during
recess? You go out to the playground and mock me with all of your
friends?"
The smile on Heather's face immediately
went away. Now she stood at the front of the class while trying to defend
herself. "But Mrs. Lynch, I was only playing. You told me to do that. I
thought we were playing a fun game."
"After all that I've done
for you!" shouted Mrs. Lynch. "You ungrateful, little brat!"
"I'm sorry Mrs.
Lynch!" apologized Heather. "Please don't be mad."
"You really hurt my
feelings by doing all of that!" explained Mrs. Lynch. "And you know
what? I don't think I want you in my class anymore."
"Mrs. Lynch, no!"
Heather pleaded.
"That's right! You can get
out of my class and move next door to Mrs. White's class. Gather up all of your
books, pencils, crayons, glue, paper—everything—from your desk."
Heather's shoulders sunk.
Reluctantly, she approached her desk and opened the top.
"Take it all out!"
ordered Mrs. Lynch.
In two minutes, Heather gathered
everything up from her desk and stacked all of her books on top of one another.
Then she placed all the supplies on top.
"Now pick all of that up and
carry it over to the corner near the door." ordered Mrs. Lynch. "You
can stand there and wait. I just need to talk to Mrs. White so she can find you
a desk."
It was quite a lot of weight
for child in first grade to carry. Heather struggled to maintain her balance
while not allowing anything to fall. When finally making it to the door,
Heather was ordered to turn around and face the class.
"So you don't like me,
huh?" asked Mrs. Lynch.
"That's not true." sadly
answered Heather.
But Mrs. Lynch wasn't buying it.
"So tell me when you started to hate me so much?"
"But I don't hate you Mrs.
Lynch." insisted Heather.
"Is it my dress? Don't you
like my dress? Maybe you don't like my hairstyle? Or maybe my teeth aren't
white enough for you?"
"You look fine."
whispered Heather. Then she asked, "Mrs. Lynch?"
"What????" sharply
asked Mrs. Lynch. "What do you want?????"
"Could I put my books down?
These are getting really heavy and I'm getting tired."
"What, are you some kind of
weakling?" charged Mrs. Lynch. "You can't hold up books for a couple
of minutes. You're pathetic, Heather.—you know that? I could stand there for an
hour and hold those books without any problem. So I guess I'm better than you.
And you're
going to make fun of me?"
By now, Heather's arms were
shaking. She aimed her face to the ceiling in some effort to summon the
strength to keep holding the stack of books and supplies. Remember, this was a
child in first grade and she was given a terribly difficult task... actually a
cruel punishment to endure.
"You disgust me!"
declared Mrs. Lynch. "I'm going next door to talk to Mrs. White so I can
get you out of here.
As Mrs. Lynch left the room,
poor Heather began to cry. Despite how cruel her teacher was, Heather was
actually fond of Mrs. Lynch. And there was just something about being evicted from her
class in the middle of the year that didn't sit right with her. Aside from
that, the kids in Mrs. White's class were weird. They were the losers who could
never do anything right.
As always, the kids in Mrs.
Lynch's class began to chatter once the teacher left the room. Would this time
be real? There were a few occasions of when Mrs. Lynch became disappointed with
a student and threatened to send him or her next door. But it never happened.
Well this time Mrs. Lynch looked really angry. Maybe this time it would
actually happen.
A minute later, Mrs. Lynch
returned and sighed. "Well, Heather, I guess put your books and supplies
back in your desk. Mrs. White doesn't have an empty desk for you to sit at.
Relieved, Heather walked back to
her desk and nearly dropped everything onto the seat.
While Heather waited for the
blood to rush back to her hands, Mrs. Lynch added a final remark,
"Remember, Heather: the only reason why you are not next door is because
Mrs. White doesn't have a desk. I'm really serious when I say that I don't want
you in my class anymore. From now on, things are going to be different between
you and me. Understand?"
"Yes..." sadly
answered Heather.
And that's what happens when
someone mocks Mrs. Lynch, the first grade teacher at Valley Grammar School.
The End!