Posts Tagged ‘inner city

26
Sep
09

Three Weeks

Time is such a relative human experience.  It is perpetually difficult for me to understand how quickly it can disappear when you keep yourself occupied.  The last time I posted about school was after my very first day.  I have now completed three weeks of the marathon school year.  If I learned a lot my first day, the same is true of the thirteen that have followed .  In order for readers to understand what I mean, I think I need to set the stage for where I teach.

ROOTS Academy is no ordinary school.  Our students are no ordinary students.  Our city is no ordinary city.  On Thursday afternoon, as I drove home from work, I followed two police cars and one police motorcycle up the hill to my house in the Plan 12 community in Aliquippa.  I knew something was up.  I knew it wasn’t good.  I read about it in the paper the next morning. An 18 year old was shot in the head.  Miraculously, he is expected to survive.  He was a student at our school two years ago.  Four of our students were around the incident when, or immediately after, it happened.  One of our students was with Shawn when he was fired at.  He had the premonition to run, but saw his friend shot in the head, lying on the ground.  At least two of our students saw Shawn lying on the ground.  “I saw him trying to stand up,” a male student said Friday in our group therapy session.  “He kept trying to stand up but he couldn’t.  And I saw him lying there.”

Thursday afternoon was not an uncommon experience for the students who attend ROOTS Academy.  In fact, if you heard them speak about the situations they go through, you’d hear them speak about them as if they were normal experiences that everyone goes through: cousins, uncles, friends shot down in homicides, drug and alcohol addiction, violence as a means of conflict management, being arrested, locked up, gun shots, early sexual experience/abuse, teenage pregnancy, never meeting their fathers.  I am their teacher, but I have no idea what they have gone through.  I cannot empathize, it is difficult even to sympathize.

Having to deal with all of this on a regular basis, you can imagine the behavior and psychological issues that our students bring into school with them.  As one students put it, “When you have all of this shit going on outside of school, you can’t just turn it off and be ‘good’ when you walk in the door.”  She is admittedly scared to walk outside of her house for fear of being hit by a stray bullet.

This year I am teaching art, english, and graphic design.  Our students are broken up into three groups of three-to-five students each.  Having a small class size definitely has its advantages (hard to imagine having all 12-15 students at once!), but even with a small class size, our teaching situation is incredibly difficult.  In each group I have at least one student with a learning disability.  I am constantly juggling behavior management, academics, and tutoring students with learning disabilities.

In many ways, I thought art and graphic design would be easy to teach.  Who doesn’t like to draw?  Isn’t creative activity innate to human nature?  For the most part, I don’t have much trouble with students in art class, but there are the few who hate to do their art work.  I emphasize over and over that they are not graded on their ability, but on their participation and their effort.  Sometimes it is pulling teeth to convince students to even try.  It seems that they have such low self-esteem that they are convinced that they cannot draw.  For someone, like myself, who believes that anyone can learn to draw, I find this incredibly frustrating.  I’m trying to work on creating an atmosphere where it is OK to experiment and to fail.

I was hit in the head by a marker on my second day of art class.  It came flying at me from an angry student who didn’t like that I corrected his use of obscene language.  Of course I wasn’t injured, but it was enough to land him in in-school-suspension for the next day.  You aren’t really allowed to ‘cus out’ teachers or assault them with classroom materials at our school.  I’m just glad it wasn’t scissors.  I was trying not to laugh though, as the student was escorted out of the classroom by our behavior support staff.  This kid was acting like a little child throwing a temper tantrum.  I wish he could have seen how absurd he looks when he allows such a little situation to escalate.  When you think, however, that this is the same type of behavior that leads someone to fire five bullets into a crowd of people, it loses its humor a bit.  Endemic to human nature is an inability to deal effectively with conflict.  Something is wrong here.  We’ve got to do something.  Something has to change.

I try to keep small victories in the forefront of my mind when I think about school.  In English class this week, for instance, I think some good work got started.  Our only senior this year, a male, seventeen, had a baby boy born to him this summer.  He has mentioned more than once that having a child has begun changing the way he looks at the world.  He is, as I said, a senior, and about ready to graduate, but he has a learning disability and can write about as well as a third grader.  He was frustrated at the material I had been giving him to work on because he felt like it was not at his level.  In spite of that, after expressing his frustration to me in a few choice words, we began working on a college application essay together.  I am walking him through, step by step, and though it is slow going, he is working hard and wants to succeed.  The topic he chose to write about was the birth of his child, and how it has changed him as a person.  It takes him a whole class period to write a paragraph but it is a joy to see him working hard, and really thinking about how is life has changed and needs to change.  “I didn’t used to care about whether or not I got shot before.  Now I do, for my son,” he says.

Friday in English class I gave my students an opportunity to write in their journals about the shooting the day before.  I wanted to give them the opportunity to get out some frustration, fear, anger, etc., and I also had to give them some work, despite the fact that they were all pretty shook up.  One of our most difficult students, a girl, fourteen, wrote two whole pages in her journal.  Students NEVER voluntarily write that much.  She has about as bad a situation as any of our students.  She’s been neglected by her mother.  She saw three family members die this year in homicides.  So far this year, art class is the only class that she has not been kicked out of yet (knock on wood!).  In art class I see this girl transform into a completely different young lady.  She is quiet, concentrating on her work.  She asks for help and encourages other students.  She volunteered to take work HOME with her over the weekend (How often, at ANY school, does a student volunteer to do homework, and on a WEEKEND?!).  I’m excited about working with her on her artwork.  I think it could be a good escape for her.  I think, too, that she has a ton of potential (something I have definitely been sure to tell her).  She could, if she chose to, use art to get herself out of her situation.  I’m talking about art school.  She has so much working against her though…

Three weeks into school, I needed to get some thoughts out.  There is a lot more where this came from.  I think I NEED to write to get some of this stuff out, to process it, to deal with it.  I welcome advice on teaching, if anyone has any experiences they want to share, things I can do better.  I want to post more frequently about some of this.

The road to athens was made for conversation.

22
Aug
07

Summer 2007

I did not blog this entire summer. I’m now paying the consequences for it. How do you explain an entire summer without being reductionistic or interminable? Thats the dilemna I am facing at present, and my proposed solution is the following eclectic summary of the summer’s events in Aliquippa. This is certainly not a holistic picture of my summer, but it is an attempt to cover those things most formitive, or at least of initial significance after this summer. In many ways processing the summer’s events.

Now that I am done qualifying…

Responsibility
This summer I was the Assistant Program Coordinator for Aliquippa Impact’s summer day camp program. I was the immediate staff supervisor to six full time staff members and six interns throughout the course of this summer. I was also, at times, responsible for the safety and order of day camp (45+ kids grades 1-6). Without going into detail, this was more responsibility than I have ever had in my life. I’ve never been in a real leadership position before. I liked it, but it was a huge challenge for me. Leadership is taxing. Just the mental burden of having so much responsibility can be a monstrous mental strain. I often found myself mentally asphixiated.

Teaching
Aliquippa Impact exists to help serve at risk youth and their families in Aliquippa, Pennsylvania. One of the ways in which A.I. goes about this is by attempting to supplement the local school district with additional educational opportunities. Aliquippa Impact primarily focuses on acedemic areas in which the school district has been unable to pour money into, namely, arts and cultural literacy. This summer I tought the fifth and sixth grade class during the A.I.’s summer day camp program. Again, the thrust of this summer program was cultural literacy. Each week of camp focused on a specific region of the world. My job was to teach about these specific regions, as well as about some of the various countries and cultures located therein. It was a challenge to creativly educate students without turning summer camp into summer school. THere were times that I feel like I succeeded, and there were certainly times which I failed.

Perhaps the week that I will remember the most was the week that we focused on the continent of Africa. Even the most ethnocentric American is aware of some of the complex and tragic issues surrounding the continent of Africa including genocide, HIV/AIDS, malaria, starvation, etc. Even though many of our kids are from less than desirable economic situations, the students in my class really latched on to the idea of suffering in Africa. It was amazing to see our kids filled with compassion, frustration and anger at the world’s problems. They wrote letters to Representative Jason Altmire expressing their concern. They talked about and interacted with complex issues. As a class project we made a video to raise awareness about genocide in Africa. I hope to have it up on YouTube soon, when I do a link will be posted.

Without going to much longer, I thoroughly enjoyed my time as a teacher. I loved researching these issues and teaching them in a way that 10 and 11 year old children could understand them. Making things fun was a huge challenge, but all in all, I think the kids really learned this summer. One thing is for certain. I love teaching and I want to continue when I can. Starting in fall 2008 I’ll be co-directing an after school program with A.I. focusing on Global Education. I’m sure I’ll be posting more on that as research continues.

Center for Leader Multiplication
The CLM is a new non-profit emerging in Aliquippa Pennsylvania. You can read more about it at the CLM website www.leadermultiplication.org. Starting June 1, 2008 I will be working as a CLM associate in Aliquippa, Pennsylvania. Each CLM associate is responsible to plant an organic, self-replicating church in Aliquippa over the course of their tenure with the organization. I will be working in conjunction with Aliquippa Impact starting art-based community programs while working as a church planter with CLM. I’ll be writing about this a lot more as time progresses as well. One of the first things I will be working on is art-based street presence. I’ll be defining that in a subsequent blog.

The Holy Spirit
The most misunderstood, and mentally challenging aspect of Christianity might just be the work of the Holy Spirit. Over the course of my time with Aliquippa Impact I’ve had the great opportunity to dialogue with people about the work of the Holy Spirit. While this is certainly not something I have reached total understanding of, I have become certain of two thing: (1) The Holy Spirit empowers Christians to live everyday and (2) the Holy Spirit manifests in the believer in supernatural and sometimes miraculous ways for the sake of the gospel.

02
Jul
07

“The age of youth was created for heroic service and not for pleasure.”

This quote hangs in the living room of our staff house on 829 Franklin Avenue, Aliquippa, PA. Although it has been there all summer, it hasn’t always held significant meaning for me. As the summer began, five weeks ago for me, I was excited to be here in Aliquippa doing something familiar. Working with the summer day camp (which currently constitutes Aliquippa Impact, Inc.’s main ministry) last summer was a joy and a challenge. Despite the summer’s vast challenges, on the whole I thoroughly enjoyed myself. It was a pleasure to be with the kids most of the time. It was in the anticipation of this joy that I was looking forward to City Camp 07.

Well this summer has been different. I’m working a similar position with a bit more responsibility. Staff has changed, but everyone is totally reliable and competent. There are a lot more kids involved in the program this summer, and that has definitely added to the challenge of day camp.

Challenge. Challenge is probably the best way to describe this summer. Last summer was a challenge for me, but somehow I think if this summer had been just like last summer, it would not have been a challenge for me. It would have been to predictable, to comfortable. Prior to this summer I never knew what it felt like to be tired, exhausted and hopeless. It seems like challenges are at every turn, like there is always something else to remember or to do. It seems like there is never enough time to get everything done, let alone sleep and rest. I’m wiped out most of the time.

But somehow, there is no other place I would rather be. This is the most fulfilling thing I have ever done with my time and life. But, I hate it most of the time. It doesn’t make sense at all, but somehow through this hardship there is joy, peace and contentment. But those things are not feelings. Somehow my feelings are the exact opposite of what we often think of as joy and peace and contentment.

Somehow this is what is meant by heroic service. There is no feeling of pleasure associated with it. Granted, sometimes my feelings do seem to be pleasure when I am working at day camp, but those feelings come and go just as quickly. This summer, most of the time my feelings are quite the opposite of pleasure. But, I know I am still serving, and I know somehow God is still using what I am trying to do. Most of the time God is using me even when I don’t want to be at day camp. Its as if just by being present at day camp God is using me. Some days I feel like all I can do is show up, I don’t have the energy to do anything else.

Is what I am doing heroic service? I don’t think so. I don’t think we are really doing anything spectacular here. But God is working through us, and in spite of us. And I’m more content here than I have ever been even though I am more tired and more miserable some days than I have ever been…

As I browse the Facebook’s of my friends from high school I am reminded of how rare this idea is. Its easy to see that many of the kids who sat with me in class are pursuing pleasure. They may even find it sometimes. But those feelings are so fleeting. Feelings come and go so rapidly that I know there must be more to life than them. Somehow true peace and joy are choices that go beyond our temporal feelings. Somehow heroic service IS what we were made for.

17
Jun
07

Back in Aliquippa

I’m back in Aliquippa again for summer 2007. Actually, I guess I’ve been here three weeks now. The staff for Aliquippa Impact City Camp 2007 has just finished our second week of training, and I think we are all itching for day camp to start. But we don’t have to wait very long, it all starts Monday.

Since writing my last post, I’ve discovered something new about service. I mentioned that last summer was the first time I was ever involved in service that really required something from me, that required real sacrifice. I was expecting this summer to be similar, that is, I was expecting to be doing the same things this summer as I was last summer. But this summer I know what to expect. I’m familiar with day camp; I’ve been there, done that, so to speak. If I just did the same things I did last summer, worked in the same way, encountered the same challenges, would that still be sacrificial service? It certainly woulnd’t be as sacrificial, or “over-my-head-ministry” as last summer was because I am familiar with it, comfortable with it.

But God has a way of making things uncomfortable for those who wish to serve him. Isn’t that interesting? So this summer I have found myself in a place of discomfort. I’m once again in a place where there are challenges I did not anticipate. I still am doing many of the things I did last summer, but now there are additional challenges that I did not anticipate.

Without going into details about these challenges (I’m still processing them in my own mind), I think that this is part of what it means to




Leaving Babylon

Something is wrong here.
Something is wrong with the way we do life.

Humans have grown accustomed to living in Babylon instead of in the Paradise we were meant to. This blog is an invitation to a different way of thinking. In order to change the way we live, we've got to think about and critique the way our society has taught us to function.

I believe another way is possible. This blog is an invitation to leave behind the thinking of Babylon. Come join me on this journey.

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