When my first born headed off to first grade, 21 years ago, she held
my hand as we walked down the hallway of Will Rogers Elementary School
in the Houston Independent School District. We walked into Ms. Miner’s
room and Meredith’s steps grew more hesitant. This wasn’t the University
of Houston Child Care Center, the place she had gone for years while I
was a doctoral student at UH. This place looked different – bigger, more
official. There were big-kid desks pushed together in clusters. And
though there were centers, they were not the dress-up center or the
cooking center or nap center or water play center of the Child Care
Center.
The room was filled with children she did not yet know, with books
she had not yet read, with a math center that had lost-teeth and
birthday charts, and with a big poster by the door labeled, “Our
Classroom Rules” that was still blank. “I don’t want to stay,” she said.
I didn’t want her to, either. I wanted her still with me, only
me. I didn’t want to give up those first six years of childhood just
yet, those years when her world mostly revolved around her parents and
new baby brother and a silly dog with big ears and afternoons spent in
our local library reading book after book after book or playing in our
neighborhood park, sometimes just sitting on the grass, watching the
ants march by. With every ounce of courage, I said, “Oh, you will love
first grade. It was my favorite year in school. I loved my first grade
teacher, Mrs. Allen, and I bet you are going to love Ms. Miner, too.”
Meredith looked doubtful and so very small. And then Ms. Miner, long
blond hair pulled back into a ponytail, saw us, came over, and bent down
to Meredith’s level. A first year teacher – the one I had told the
principal that if he was willing to listen to requests I wanted – Ms.
Miner was full of energy and excitement. She loved books, wanted to be a
great teacher, and had obviously spent weeks making her room look
inviting to these 22 six-year-olds.
“Oh, you’re Meredith! I recognized you from your picture! Come here
and let me introduce you to some others. And let me show you all around
the room. And, hey, you brought Corduroy as your favorite book and
that’s one of my favorite books, too!”
And then, somehow, without me even realizing, Meredith’s small hand
moved from mine to Ms. Miner’s and she was gone. She was swallowed up by
the sheer joy this other woman brought into her classroom, into
learning, and into my child’s life. “I guess I’ll be going now,” I said
to Meredith who was busy putting school supplies away in her desk. “So,
I’ll be just around the corner at our house,” I said blinking hard to
keep away the tears.” I think she nodded. Perhaps she even paused to
wave. My feet couldn’t move and Ms. Miner gently helped me and a few
other moms out of the classroom. “She’s really shy,” I said to Ms. Miner
just as Meredith sped by holding a new friend’s hand showing her “all
these hooks where we can hang our backpacks.”
Meredith was breathless with excitement at the end of that day –
every day – and by the end of the first week, our family had a new
member: Ms. Miner. Each afternoon and for long into the evening, I had
to listen to “Ms. Miner said . . .” and “Ms. Miner thinks . . .” and
“Ms. Miner showed us . . .” and “Ms. Miner suggested . . .” and when I
slipped and said, “Oh damn” at dinner burned in the oven, I was reminded
that “Mom, Ms. Miner would never say . . . .” Right, I smiled through
gritted teeth. ”Ms. Miner says that manners are important,” Meredith
said as she explained why we must always put our napkins in our laps,
something that I swear I had mentioned a million times.
For the entire year I watched my child fall in love with school, with
learning, with figuring out, and most importantly, with her first grade
teacher, Ms. Miner. Meredith, who had once hated ponytails, now only
wanted to wear ponytails. And blue skirts, “just like Ms. Miner’s.” “And
Mom, my name starts with an M and Ms. Miner starts with an M. Isn’t
that great!! We match!” Yes, Meredith, just great. Really great. Oh
damn.
Though I had been a teacher for years before having Meredith, before
sending her off to first grade, I had never truly understood the power
of a teacher in a child’s life. We give our most precious and priceless
to you – dear teachers – each year, knowing you will teach them, but
also hoping you will care for them, help them discover how very much
they matter, watching over them, and being there when they have been
hurt by the ones who won’t let them sit at the “popular” table – and
then you do just that and they fall in love with you. It shows up in
different ways, as they grow older. But it’s still there, this deep
affection and respect. And, certainly, it’s harder to forge those bonds
when there are 150 students instead of 22, when the day is fragmented
into 45 minute segments, when education seems to be more about the test
than the child. But I promise, underneath that bravado of the seventh
grader or swagger of the tenth grader you will find that small first
grader who wonders, “Will my teacher like me?” And when that child –
that teen – knows that you believe he or she matters, then that student
will do most anything for you.
To this day, Meredith remembers you, Ms. Miner, and to this day, I so
hated how much she loved you that year. And, simultaneously, I am so
grateful that she did.
And so, teachers, across this country during the next two weeks, most
of you will be opening your classroom doors in a first-day welcoming
for your students. As a teacher I am proud to stand beside you in all
that you do. But as a parent, well, as a parent I stand in awe of all
that you do. And to Ms. Miner, thank you.
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