Survival

By Larry Shurilla

Invariably, when one is writing a memoir about a middle school teaching career, the subject of vomiting will come up. Okay, it’s not invariable and may never come up when middle school education is discussed, but if you ever did throw up in school, you will remember it for a lifetime. And if you had a classmate puke his or her guts out, you may be emotionally scarred from the close proximity to the bile blast.


Sure, I’ve had a handful of kids come up to my desk over the years and say, “Mr. Shurilla, I don’t feel so goo…” and then haul off to the waste basket to make a quick deposit, but there’s nothing special in that. It happens all the time. However, as I look back, there is one hurl episode that comes to mind not only for its ferocity, but also for its humanity.


It began as a school day like any other that year. Teach math, teach math again, teach science, eat lunch, teach science again, have a prep period, and then end the day with reading. This particular group of students was reading from a survival series that contained stories of mountain storms, inner city racial conflicts, and airplane crash landings. We could’ve added our own survival chapter titled: Upchuck, Stomach Macaroni, or for the high-brow readers, The Nemesis of Emesis.


Somewhere in the middle of the period, a skinny white kid with limited academic ability, but one who excelled in humility and guilelessness––in other words the type of kid the “cool kids” loved to pick on––happened to be sitting in the front row directly in front of me as I was teaching. Being the consummately observant professional educator that I was, I noticed that “Carl” was looking rather ashen. Instead of asking him how he felt, I did what any award-winning classroom teacher would do, I ignored my instincts and called on him to read aloud. This Carl did with instant obedience, but something was off. He began to stop reading intermittently and had a surprised look on his face, as if he was discovering a primordial urge, a repulsive yet basic human survival instinct. By the time I realized what was happening, it was far too late. Carl’s throat began a kind of rhythmic worm dance, not unlike the dinner scene from the first Alien movie, and then the first eruption began. Picture a vomit bazooka firing a deadly spread in a 180-degree arc around the front of the room. Simultaneously, every other student recoiled amid groans of horror, and shoved their chairs away from ground zero, leaving Carl alone, soaking in his vomit bath.


There was a momentary pause, allowing Carl to reload, and the second saliva salvo commenced. Ever a scientist, I recall being startled that so much vomit could come out of one individual. When the fallout settled and all bile batteries were emptied, I immediately came to Carl’s rescue by running to the call button on the wall, calling the office, and asking that a custodian be dispensed to Room N-9, ASAP!


Now for the humanity.


This particular group of students was known for picking on each other. I expected a lot of complaining and comments like, “You are so gross, Carl! Sick, Carl! Get out of here, man! That smells sooooo foul!” Much to my pleasure and surprise, a black kid I’ll call Zach, known to be one of the biggest teasers in the group, gently approached Carl from behind, put his hand on the one dry spot of Carl’s shoulder and said, “It’s all right, man. It’ll be all right.” The room was silent. It felt like a real life Willy Wonka was holding the everlasting gobstopper and saying, “So shines a good deed in a weary world.” And thus, it was.


The class remained quiet. The custodian came, spread, and swept up his magical tan powder as Carl was escorted by another student down to the nurse’s room. I never heard any of the kids make fun of Carl for that episode. Sometimes, even amid a crisis situation, the kids will rise above it all and teach us grown-ups about kindness and humanity.

Thanks, Zach. It doesn’t have to take a foreign battlefield or Super Bowl comeback to elicit our moral courage. Sometimes, all you need is a classroom of diverse kids, reading about survival and seeing a friend in need. Yeah, Carl, it really will be all right.

Live Long and Prosper

By Larry Shurilla

“A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. LLAP”

This was the final tweet from the actor, Leonard Nimoy, better known as television’s Mr. Spock from Star Trek-The Original Series. The quote is also quite representative of teaching. This book is like my garden and the flowers are my teaching memories, preserved for anyone inclined to check them out! If you ask any of my students what my favorite television program of all time is, you’ll get a resounding “Star Trek!” for an answer.

As a seven-year-old boy, there I was that Thursday night in September of 1966 at 7 o’clock, eyes glued to Channel 4 on the TV, for the very first episode of Star Trek! My brothers and I were Sci-Fi fanatics. We watched Lost in Space, The Outer Limits, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea and any cheap space movie we could tune our three channels to! Star Trek, with its phasers, star ships, communicators, tricorders, transporters, and photon torpedoes, looked to be a potent cocktail for any thirsty Sci-Fi fan and it did not disappoint! We absolutely loved it and haven’t stopped loving it for over 50 years!

With about 6 years left in my teaching career, I thought it was time to try something new at our middle school. I decided to organize a Science Fiction Club! I don’t believe I ever heard of any other middle school having a Sci-Fi Club before, but having had so many conversations with kids about Sci-Fi topics in my classroom, I knew there was a niche for this sort of thing.

So, I talked to the associate principal in charge of clubs and he agreed this club just might work! I got to work and made a few morning announcements plugging the club with talk of Star Trek, Star Wars, and classic Sci-fi movies like Forbidden Planet and This Island Earth.

I believe we started out with about 6 or 7 members and by the fifth year we had about 25 with a good mix of boys and girls! I structured the club with a fair chunk of time for discussion about any Sci-Fi topic the kids were interested in followed by time to play a card game called, Star Trek Uno, and then on to the viewing of classic Star Trek TV episodes and timeless Sci-Fi movies.

My main goals as Club Advisor were: give kids opportunities to make friends with others who had the same interests, give them an outlet for group discussions about things they loved and ultimately give them a little more sense of belonging in the middle school, which can be a pretty frightening place when you’re in the tween years! It was also my job to share with the kids my personal history with and knowledge of Sci-Fi and then they could use that as a base to see how Sci-Fi has evolved and morphed over the years.

I must say, the club was a lot of fun. We had some very heated discussions over: Which was the best Star Wars’ movie?, What’s better-Star Trek or Star Wars?, Who is the best Dr. Who’ doctor?, What other plots exist in the Star Wars and Star Trek universe of books, games, and online websites? Who is the best Star Trek Captain? (Kirk, of course!) and so on!

Being a science teacher, my love of Star Trek was also useful in the classroom. How could a discussion of technological progress in the world not include Star Trek and its vision of the future? Desktop computers, view screens and cordless communicators were all present in fiction before they were in reality. Star Trek’s harmonious blend of races working together, without prejudice and stereotyping, toward a common goal was also a fine projection of what the future could become and that is as important now as it was in the 1960s! I always told the kids in my science classes, “If we can think of it, we can create it! The world needs dreamers and doers who work together to better our world. Whether we’ve made the problem ourselves, like what to do with nuclear waste and plastic in the oceans, or the problem has existed for centuries, like cancer or how to achieve sustainable powered flight (Thank you Wilbur and Orville Wright!), there is no problem we cannot overcome with persistent effort, use of the technology of the day, and vision.”

We’re often told as educators that we need to keep the minds of our children open, flexible, and trained with problem solving skills. Appropriate Science Fiction naturally leads our kids into these areas of the mind. We often get so caught up with the latest teaching technique fad that we lose sight of, what is to me, the most important component of teaching – motivation! If you have it, you can accomplish anything and without it, you will accomplish nothing. Kids can be lazy or overwhelmed. Kids can be unable or unchallenged. These are some of the problems teachers face every day with kids in the same classroom trying to learn the same material. I have no magic solution here, but I will repeat, if you have a motivated student, you can accomplish anything and if you have an unmotivated student, you will accomplish nothing. Let us work on how to better motivate students by providing a safe and interesting classroom environment. I have also found that bringing science fiction into the classroom can help motivate many of our students.

Having taught for 31 years, I get the great pendulum of education. How certain disciplinary techniques, philosophies, and teaching pedagogies come into fashion and then, not too many years later, are branded as the worst methodology in history- until the pendulum swings back and we do it all over again! I am reminded of Heidi Klum on Project Runway, a competitive fashion designing television show, and what she says each week to her fashion designers, “Designers. One week you are in, and the next, you are out!” And thus, it seems to be in education. One week, Robert Marzano, you are in, and the next week, Madeline Hunter, you are out! This swinging pendulum may be why we see more experienced teachers become so rigid in their unwillingness to change, because they’ve already been through multiple teaching fads and just want to rely on what has truly worked for them in their classrooms. Perhaps an attitude of, “Keep the best, throw out the rest!” may prove the most beneficial to teachers of all ages and experience levels.

If you’re a science teacher, try bringing a little science fiction into your classroom and see if it doesn’t amp up the motivation for a lot of your students. A two-minute movie clip showing a Star Ship extinguishing an active volcano with a cold fusion detonator, is a great way to introduce an earth science lesson on volcanology! It may not be included in a Smart Board lesson plan or textbook, but it may motivate a majority of your students to actually listen to what you’re talking about!

Finally, here’s an unexpected bonus to bringing Sci-Fi into the classroom! One of the most creative home-made cards given to me for retirement by one of my students read as follows:

(On the Cover)

What’s the
best way to say
Goodbye
and happy retirement
to your favorite
Science
teacher?

(Next page)

To Infinity and
beyond!

No that’s buzz
lightyear.

May the force
be with
yo-
No still doesn’t sound
right.

(Next page)

Larry, I am your
Fath-
No, I’m not your Father
and that’s still not
it.

I’ve got it….

(Last page)

Live Long
and
Prosper!

From: Your Awesome Student

Now that’s boldly going where no student has gone before! Truly, this card was a formative assessment indicating this student has been well taught in the annals of the purest science fiction!

A few days ago, I saw a tee shirt of a Peanuts’ cartoon with Charlie Brown, head bowed down in depression, and Violet standing a step or two behind him. The bubble caption read, “I still miss Leonard Nimoy.” My feelings exactly. Even the most magnificent of flowers seem only to last a moment in time, but therein lies part of their magic. That moment is so alive, so precious, and may live on in our memories, forever.

#LLAP, my old friend.

Uncle Larry

By Larry Shurilla

As teachers, we get called lots of names. Many of which I cannot print, but those are usually shouted in outbursts when a student has really lost it and you’ll only hear them once in a blue moon. I usually heard, “Mr. Shurilla, Mr. S or Coach,” all my years of teaching, but every once in a while, a kid would get ahold of your first name. Now, I do understand there are a few teachers that don’t mind it and actually prefer to have their students address them by their first name, but I always thought I needed that wall of professionalism that a Mr. or Mrs. Something provided. I didn’t want to get too chummy-chummy with the kids and hearing a “Hey, Larry!” from a kid in the back of the classroom was, to me, as bad as scratching your fingernails on a chalkboard or chewing on aluminum foil! Give me Liberty, Death, or Mr. S, but don’t you dare call me Larry!

Somewhere in the middle of my career, I had the fortune of teaching three inseparable girls. Let’s call them Ally, Bella, and Kate. You know the type. They were always together in class, at lunch, in the halls, by their lockers-inseparable. They were also very bright and fun loving. They would get the giggles at almost anything and were so good natured that you just couldn’t get mad at them. They would get the jokes your other kids wouldn’t and were kind to everyone.

As luck would have it, one day some teacher must’ve been talking to me by my desk and said something like, “So Larry, when are you gonna get to Mixed Numbers in math?” or something like that. Bing! Bing! Bong! The ears on Ally shot up like a cat when you shake a Friskies’ box and she said with a crazed look of delight shining in her eyes, “Mr. S? Your name is Larry?!”

“Well, what am I going to say now?” I thought. She heard it. I’m not going to lie about my name, so I said, “Yeah, Ally, that’s my first name.”

Mistake. I should’ve lied. The name spread faster than a viral gagging cat YouTube video between the three and they kept using it! “Larry this” and “Larry that” until finally, I had to get serious with them and said, “Now look girls, you can’t keep calling me, Larry. We have to keep things a bit more professional in a school setting. That’s just how it is.”

They huddled up for a moment and then one of them said, staring at me with big eyes like the cat from Shrek, “Can we call you, Uncle Larry, then?”

This book is about confessions, successes, and mistakes, right? Mistake number two. I just couldn’t say no! So, I said, “OK, you can call me Uncle Larry, but only if other kids aren’t around and only once in a long while, OK?”

Needless to say, the girls were ecstatic and after about two microseconds, I realized that this could really go south fast. Imagine me teaching something in class and the principal drops in for a beloved observation and Bella or Kate goes, “Uncle Larry, do we have to do the evens or the odd problems for homework?”

The principal turns her head toward me and mumbles, “Uncle Larry? A bit informal aren’t we, Mister Shurilla? Why don’t you come down to my office after class and we’ll have a little chat with the HR-Director.”

Well, something like that scenario never happened! The girls were true to their word and only every now and then would I hear the two sacred words pronounced. I can still picture, Kate, waiting at the classroom door until all the other students had left and whispering, “Bye, Uncle Larry,” and then scooting out the door to meet up with her friends for lunch.

Time marches on. If you think it doesn’t, just try backing it up one second! You may wish it would go faster, but it never slows down, stops or goes into reverse. Time relentlessly moves forward and no power yet invented can change that. Whether you’re having a good year and you want to teach that class forever or you’ve got a group of Satan’s spawn and can’t wait to bless the 7th grade teachers with Children of the Corn, you only have them for one year and they move on to the next grade.

When you teach for more than thirty years an awful lot of things can happen to those kids. Some good. Some bad. And all the kids grow up. You see your students move on to 7th and 8th grade and then on to high school. You may see a picture of them in the district newsletter, run into them at the grocery store, or hear about their accomplishments from their parents or siblings, but nothing, no nothing can prepare you for the moment when you hear that one of your former kids is going to die.

Cancer does its deadly drop-ins to households indiscriminately. There are no protections on the homes of the young and innocent. One day, about four years after we taught her, we heard Kate was dying of cancer. Time was a blur after we were informed and suddenly Kate had passed, the funeral was set, and we, a group of her old 6th grade teachers, went to the church to pay our final respects. The death of one so young, so full of life seemed insidious. She was in the bloom of life and had so much to look forward to!

There was a long line of friends and loved ones that weekday evening at the church. Kate had touched many people in the community and everyone there wanted to show they cared. As I looked around the church, at all the friendly people quietly talking to each other, the beautiful flowers, the family gathered around the casket, I couldn’t help thinking this shouldn’t be happening. We should be here for Kate’s wedding, not a funeral, but I also felt an unmistakable feeling of love and gratitude that though her life was short, it was filled with love.

Soon we were shaking hands with Kate’s parents and expressing our sympathies when we spied Ally and Bella near the end of the family line. As we drew close, we formed a group hug, the old 6th grade teachers and our two former students. I don’t recall exactly what we said, but it wasn’t much, just that we cared. We held onto each other for a moment or two longer and then Ally squeaked out two of the sweetest words I have ever heard in my life. With tears in her eyes and a smile on her face she quickly whispered, “Uncle Larry.”

Room N-9 Introduction – Becky

Room N-9

180 Days of Hell and Heaven

By Larry Shurilla

 

 

Introduction

The day will come to every classroom teacher, when he or she will take that final walk through their classroom. I’m not talking about the end of the school year, get ready for summer walk-through. That blitzkrieg happens every year with textbook check-ins, bulletin board dismantling, backing up computer files and stashing of desk minutia. No, I’m talking about the “Final Walk-Through”- the retirement walk-through, when you really won’t be back in that room you called home for X number of years. In my case, it was a 31year good bye.

I begin writing this reverie of my teaching career about 3 months after that final walk-through. The early September sun is beginning to set and I feel the time is right, while the memories are still fresh and school bus drivers are practicing their new routes, to put down in writing some of the most memorable days of my teaching career.

Charles Dickens, one of my favorite authors, began his book, A Tale of Two Cities, with the phrase, “It was the best of times. It was the worst of times.” Never to be compared to the eloquence of Dickens, yet unable to ignore the paradox of remembering the good with the bad, I chose to subtitle this memoir, 180 Days of Hell and Heaven.

Why 180 days? Aside from the inservice and school work days mandated each year, the typical teacher contract stipulates 180 student contact days in a school term. Hell, because teaching is tough.  Working with difficult students, finicky administration and disgruntled parents is trying on anyone’s soul. I used to kid with my son that my Personal Teacher’s Hell would consist of a private viewing room, wherein I was strapped to a chair and forced to face a video screen which displayed spliced classroom scenes from every student I ignored in my teaching career! As other fellow teachers returned from Satan’s video booth, we would all ask each other, “How long was yours? Two weeks. How long was yours? A month. How long was yours?” I really tried not to ignore students when they wanted to share the news about their new hamster, or where they went over the weekend, or the game they won or lost, but we all know there comes a time when the other 27 are waiting and restless while we’re trying to accommodate-the one!

Teaching is Heaven because working with children is God’s choicest profession and oftentimes those few minutes we give to the one, connect us in a beautiful way, forever. Teaching is life. We even become part of family discussions at the dinner table for a year and sometimes more. “Mr. Shurilla ripped his pants on the playground today, Dad!  Oh, Mom! Mr. Shurilla said he was ready for the nut house after teaching our class today!”

This writing will not be strictly chronological. Rather, as I think back on all those years of teaching, certain events will come to mind and I’ll share them to the best of my recollection. Oh, and I’m changing all the school related names, except my own! No one need fear, neither students nor fellow teachers, that I am talking about them or you! Of course, I will be talking about them and you, but I won’t be using your name and no one will know for sure.

If you’re a teacher and your classroom is anything like mine, I’m sure you could tell a story or two about the mementos you have cluttering your desk or plastering your walls.  Oops, excuse me, not plastering. Masking tape or anything that really works on the walls was disallowed in my school years ago. Only blue painters’ tape or perhaps, the gummy stuff you roll into little balls is allowed now.  OK, first confession. When my posters kept falling down for the fifth time after two weeks of school, I may have enlisted a roll of grey duct tape to permanently cement those Periodic Table Charts and Snoopy Inspirations onto the white classroom walls of 6th grade Room N-9! Phew! Glad I got that off my chest, but you won’t get it off my walls!

While I think anyone interested in chuckling, crying, observing or relating to the human experience may enjoy reading this book, I found that I was often thinking of new teachers as I wrote, envying them for the adventure that awaits, and wanting in some very small way, to impart lessons that have sunk into my muskmelon of a head!

In the end, these stories are my mementos, the ones I felt worth sharing. They line the walls of my heart and are gently placed on the desktop of my soul, where I can take a quick peek or pause and hold them dear and remember the faces and stories of my kids and friends who shared their lives with me. Now get going and start reading! I’ve just cracked open the door to room N-9 and the bell’s gonna ring any minute!

 

*******************************

 

 

 

Becky

 

I spent the first 10 years of my teaching career as a Learning Disabilities (LD) teacher. Learning Disabilities comes under the umbrella of Special Education nomenclature. ED (Emotional Disabilities), CD (Cognitive Disabilities), etc., are all labels I’m sure you’ve heard. Labels can be so prejudiced.  As soon as we hear the label, we have the tendency to box that person and shelve them as wild, dull, lazy, brilliant, etc. Use a label if it helps you better understand a student, but never truly assess them until you’ve really gotten to know them. I think most teachers understand this; we’ve had so many kids that just didn’t fit the label.

Speaking of labels, I guess I do have an exception to justify the labeling of people and that would have to do with clothing labels. You see, my male teacher friends and I came up with a labeling system using clothing brand names to figuratively box ourselves and other teachers in. For example, my trendy teaching buddy who liked pressed clothes, expensive cologne and found a wrinkle in fabric to be offensive; he was labeled, Versace. Another dear friend, who was neat, organized and dependable was labeled, Nautica. I, myself, being a struggling parent of four, was allergic to an iron and found no problem wearing white socks with dark shoes. I was labeled, St. John’s Bay. Oh, Oh! Here comes Hilfiger and Ducks Unlimited, one too sophisticated and the other too-into-hunting for my taste! I am St. John’s Bay, after all! OK, enough of Project Runway-Label Edition, let’s get back to the kids.

As students, as people, as human beings, we all have gifts and we all have handicaps when compared to everyone else.  My job, as a teacher, was to find my students’ gifts and help them use their strengths to succeed, to help prepare them for the workforce, but more importantly, to prepare them for life. That is a much bigger and nebulous set of criteria. Most teachers may hate labels, but for efficiency’s sake and to get kids the help they need, the labels serve a purpose. They provide funding to give kids extra support that simply wouldn’t be there without it. Once you’re out of school, those school labels seem to fade away and you’re judged more on how well you perform your job, not on an old classification. Certainly, the eternal labels of black and white, male and female, rich and poor, etc., will have to be dealt with in our society, but I’ve had many of my former LD students become great successes and a good share who have not, just like their regular education and gifted classmates. How you use your gifts to overcome your handicaps, how hard and consistent you are willing to work, how well you get along with others, these are traits that a productive person will always use to succeed and these are the attributes I tried to foster and instill in my students every day.

I’ve always had a soft spot when it came to kids who didn’t seem to fit in or who had a difficult time learning. I taught special education for 10 years and regular education for 21. Whether in our society in general or in a school setting, the haves have always picked on the have-nots. I hated teasing and bullying as a teacher and tried to protect my kids as best I could. I think there’ll be some video footage in my own teacher hell of me not noticing bullying in my classroom or hallway, or me not doing enough to stop it; but trust me, as teachers, we hate it. It hurts to see or know that one of your students is being bullied or picked on for whatever reason. We do all we can to empower kids on how to prevent, lessen, or stop bullying from happening and we take the bullies to task. We know they are hurting as well and intimidate others to lessen their own pain and inadequacies. As teachers, we must love the unlovable.

One day, as I was looking out my classroom window onto the playground during lunch recess, I noticed a student of mine, sitting all by herself on the edge of the sidewalk with a paperback in her hands. Hundreds of kids were running around her, laughing, playing tag. Others were in little groups, giggling and sharing stories. Some were on the grass playing touch football, but there she was, all alone, reading. It gave me pause to ponder. School was difficult for her, but she tried hard every day. At first glance, her teeth were too big, she was middle school awkward and some kids would make fun of her. This is the type of student I always tried to be extra kind to, give a little more attention to, give them a greater portion of my limited time bag. I wrote a poem about her. Of course, I’ve changed the name, but any two-syllable name will do. Becky, Jenny, Carly, you pick the name.  There are Beckies on any playground, at any recess, in any school, on any day of the year.

 

 

 

 

 

Becky

By Larry Shurilla

 

Becky sits alone on the playground

And dreams about the friends she doesn’t have

Oh, she likes to read, about knights in shining armor

Movies starring heroes,

But the boys will notice braces more than smiles

 

Becky sits alone in the classroom

And dreams about what she would like to be

But learning’s kind of hard, she’ll never pass the bar

And her momma said, “Don’t set your hopes too high.”

 

Looks can be deceiving

Strength comes from believing that

The only one who beats you is yourself

 

Becky sits alone in the lunchroom

And tries to look away from nasty stares

Middle School is cruel, Where’s the Golden Rule?

And she wonders if the world holds one who cares

 

Looks can be deceiving

Strength comes from believing that

The only one who beats you is yourself

 

Becky sits alone on the playground

And notices that it’s a beautiful day

Sun shines warm and friendly, breezes blowing gently

Dry the single tear shed from her heart

 

#

 

 

Every day, as teachers, we have a most important task to accomplish in our classrooms. You won’t find it in a list of objectives in a math or English teacher’s edition. You won’t be writing it on your whiteboard as a learning target, but look over that classroom of yours and find Becky. Find the one who looks the most lonely, the most forgotten, the most noticed for all the wrong reasons. Give her or him, your precious gift of time. Notice her. Tell her you need her to help you do something. Tell her with your words and smile that she is important and trusted. A few kind words and a smile can paint a rainbow in her soul that could last a lifetime.

Becky visited me in my classroom many years after I taught her. She had graduated college and was becoming very successful at her new job. She never knew I noticed her on the playground that one day so long ago, or that I wrote a poem about her, nor did she spot the smile in my heart that she had become a beautiful, competent, caring young adult.