Rules of the Heart
(www.edweek.org/tm/articles/2005/10/01/02excerpt.h17.html) |
Like
many elementary school teachers, Elaine Moore started each day with “circle
time,” a period when students could share anything they wanted with the class
and respond to each other’s observations. But in December 1992, the tight knit
circle of students in her 4th grade class at the Ravenwood School in Eagle
River, Alaska, was unexpectedly shattered by the illness of Seamus Farrell, who
was soon diagnosed with terminal brain cancer. Moore, then in her 15th year of
teaching, was determined to keep the lively 10-year-old a part of her class for
as long as possible, ultimately organizing her students into small groups that
visited Seamus every day at home through the rest of the school year.
Based on
interviews with Moore, her colleagues, and Seamus’ classmates, now college age,
journalist and author Bob Katz tells in Elaine’s Circle
(Marlowe & Company) the story of the extraordinary outpouring of support
for Seamus, who died shortly after starting 5th grade the following fall. But
before the class visits began, Elaine had to break the news to her students,
their parents, and her administrator, and Katz shows that in doing so, she
relied on equal measures of compassion and intuition.
Circle Time was
the emotional centerpiece of Elaine’s teaching style. Each morning, immediately
after attendance was taken and Ravenwood's principal had wrapped up his
announcements over the PA system, Elaine would move to the center of the room.
Like a camp counselor urging everyone into the pool, she’d say, “Circle up.”
Kids hopped from
their desks to take up positions on the carpet. It only worked, Elaine knew, if
everyone sat together on the floor. Over the years, Elaine had been assigned
several student teachers from the University of Alaska, eager young collegians
diligently studying the craft of professional teaching.
“Does it really
have to be the floor?” they’d squeamishly ask.
“Yes,” she’d
insist. “You need intimacy to reach children. Sit with them on the floor.”
Elaine had two
ironclad rules for Circle Time: Anyone could say whatever he or she wanted so
long as it had some connection to learning, and no one was allowed to criticize
or scorn another’s remarks. A boy could say he was mad at his brother for
ruining his Lego construction. A child could talk about losing a favorite
mitten if it tied in to a lesson or discussion.
Elaine wondered
what grown-ups who knew nothing of elementary school norms would make of this.
Most adults, she believed, would, if allowed to eavesdrop, be astounded at how
sensitive, articulate, thoughtful, and wise 10-year-olds could be. Circle Time
was like watching a movie that never stopped being interesting and never failed
to enrich. At least, that’s how it was for her.
“Circle
up,” Elaine said. The children, newly returned from holiday break, gathered
around. Outside the big windows, the January morning was dark and bitterly
cold. Everyone felt the coziness of being huddled together again in Room 112.
Circle Time on
the first day back after winter vacation was always lively. Everyone had two
weeks’ worth of stories to tell. Eagle River families often traveled to the
Lower 48 to visit relatives, yielding enthusiastic accounts of first cousins
who were so much fun, or an indoor zoo where a gorilla went crazy, or spending
the entire night in the Minneapolis airport because of a canceled flight.
Kids who stayed
in town had outdoor adventures to report skiing at Alyeska, caroling with their
church group.
“I want to tell
you about Seamus,” Elaine began. She had conferred with his parents, wanting to
respect their wishes concerning what information to disclose. “Seamus is very
ill.”
“I thought his
surgery was OK,” said one boy.
“We thought it
was,” Elaine said, sighing.
This was going
to be difficult, but it was the right thing to do.
She had thought
long and hard about how to approach this. In all probability, this was going to
be the children’s first exposure to death. One of the side features of living
in Alaska was that many families were cut off from elderly relatives. They had
little experience with aged or dying grandparents. Not that there was a true
comparison. Children think they are immortal. And why shouldn’t they? The odds
favor them. One of the wonderful benefits to being young is being able to
plunge into the moment, the sweet center of here and now, like there’s no
tomorrow. Part of what allows kids to be kids is precisely this.
Facing up to
Seamus’ situation was bound to affect them. Ignoring his situation was not,
Elaine believed, an option.
“Seamus has
cancer, and we’ve learned it is very serious,” she told the class. “He may not
be able to come back to school.”
The children
froze. No squirming, no movement, no chatter, no noise. Seamus not coming back
to class? Not popping through the door first thing in the morning and
scrambling to find a place among them on the floor at Circle Time? It didn’t
seem right. It didn’t seem fair. And it didn’t seem that there should be
nothing at all they could do about it.
“He is still
part of our class,” Elaine reassured them. It sounded like the right thing to
say. But even as she said it, she had no clear notion of how this fact might be
borne out. She only knew that the kids could not be cut off so abruptly from
their bubbly classmate.
“He loves
getting your notes,” she added. “He knows how much you miss him.”
“What happens if
he dies?”
This one caught
her by surprise. Elaine composed her answer carefully. “That is something each
of you might want to talk about with your parents. People have different
beliefs about that.”
“But we’ll get
to see him again, won’t we?”
This, she could
see, was going to be one tricky balancing act, fulfilling her promise to be
honest and yet somehow going onward with hope. ”I hope so, yes. I’ll find out
more from his parents,” she promised.
There was a lull
in the classroom, which was not typical. A teaching colleague once asked,
expressing some skepticism about Circle Time, “What happens when nobody has
anything to say?”
“It’s never
happened,” Elaine had answered bluntly. And that was true.
The lull did not
last long. The kids, Elaine could tell, were thinking hard. “He’s too sick to
come to class, right?” someone asked.
“Yes, that’s
right.”
“Can we visit
him?”
“Yes, of
course.”
“I mean as a
class, can we visit him?”
“Possibly,”
Elaine hedged. The reality, she recognized, would be more complicated. It was
not her style to equivocate, but she could see where this might be going. The
children were eager to do something. Such a response was natural. As a
practical matter, however, they were 4th graders in a public school that
operated under strict guidelines.
Schools, for all
the improvised, unpredictable, seat-of-the-pants magic that so often
constitutes the grand moments of learning, are famously bureaucratized
environments. So whatever gestures the kids might want to make toward Seamus,
to help ease their sadness and his, protocol was involved.
Schools have
rules.
But so does the
human heart.
Elaine prepared
a letter for the parents. The letter was written in the same straightforward
tone as the other missives the parents had received from her related to teacher
conferences or upcoming field trips. The note read:
Dear
parents,
As you know,
Seamus has an inoperable brain tumor. I would like to begin talking with the
children gently and honestly about his condition. I have excellent videos and
books to help the children understand, as well as open up lines of
communication. A hospice volunteer will be available to speak to the students
and help answer questions. My hope is that it will become an open topic of
conversation in our classroom. We will spend a lot of time talking about our
feelings and questions. Your child will need lots of support in coping with
their classmate’s terminal illness. But I believe children have an amazing
ability and capacity to deal with the truth. Even sad truths relieve the
anxiety of uncertainty.
This will be a
learning opportunity for your child. I know from my own experience that when
you learn about death, you actually are learning about life.
Thank you for
your continued support.
Sincerely,
Elaine Moore
Before running
off copies of the note, Elaine paused to read it over. It looked OK. Yes, it
made some references to Seamus’ condition that could have been phrased
differently. But she could not think of a better way to state it. Seamus didn’t
have long to live. The kids cared about him. Time was running out. That
monumental fact had to be part of their class. How else to put it?
At the end of
the afternoon, Elaine told the class that she had a letter to give to their
parents: Would they please put it in their backpacks and be sure to give it to
their mother or father?
The bell rang.
Kids grabbed their coats off the racks, yanked their caps from the sleeves, and
tumbled out to the bus. Elaine sighed. The day was done. An important first
step had been taken. There was no way to know exactly the right way to handle
this. She had only her own instincts to go on, her instincts about kids.
After school,
Joan Johnson stopped by. Joan and Elaine were part of an informal group of
teachers, imbued with ideas of outdoor education and eager to explore
innovative ways of reaching children, who met after school once a week. Elaine
told Joan about the note. Joan urged her, if only to cover her bases, to show a
copy to the principal. Elaine grumbled but agreed that Joan was probably right.
Elaine walked
down the corridor and found Arge Jeffery in his office. From his window, you
could see the kids boarding the school buses beneath the gleaming floodlights.
Elaine handed Arge the letter, saying she wanted him to be aware of how she was
handling the seriousness of Seamus’ situation.
Arge was a
stocky, balding, carefully dressed man with a neatly trimmed gray beard and a
habit of jingling change in his pocket while he conversed. He was a stickler
for institutional procedure. It was said that he was somewhat misplaced in
education and that he would have made a keen trial lawyer.
Elaine and Arge
had their disagreements yet maintained a professional respect. She chafed at
some of his bureaucratic ways but understood he was ultimately responsible for
governing a larger apparatus. Similarly, he wished Elaine were more
conventional but admired her skill with students.
He quickly read
the letter.
“What?” he
bellowed. ”“Terminal”? Elaine, you can’t say a thing like that!”
“Arge,” she
replied, calmly dropping her voice tote level of a whisper, “he has six weeks
to live.”
“Well, you can’t
use a word like ‘terminal’ around kids.”
“What word,
then? Tell me.”
“I don’t know,
Elaine. Something like ... like ... “
She dared him to
say it: something happier, more uplifting, something sugarcoated and
optimistic?
He tossed the
letter back. “Rewrite it!”
“The letter,”
Elaine quietly informed him, “has already gone home.”
With that, she
turned and went back to her room to pack up for the day.
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