It should be noted that when embarking on this fellowship I learned I should not expect any parents to show up for parent-teacher conferences. None. Lack of parent-guardian involvement is stressed. That said, nearly half of my 350 students showed up with concerned parental figures. I’m blessed with a great place to work.
Several parents of high-performing students stopped by just to say, “She talks about you all the time, so we had to meet you.” One mother commented concerning her daughter, “She was so mad at me for making her orthodontist appointment during Spanish. She hates to miss your class.” Yet another mother recounted, “We were driving down the street and my daughter yelled, “That’s her mom! That’s my Spanish teacher!”
It’s difficult to explain how this made me feel; the emotion it evoked. Unexpected tears rushed my eyes. A sense of purpose flooded my soul. And the weight of responsibility nearly buckled my knees. “Is it possible that I’m truly making the impact I dreamed of making?” I wondered.
At the other end of the praise train, I absolutely adored complimenting students in front of their parents. It freaked everyone out, especially the kids. Some disruptive, low-performing students showed up as the personification of dog-with-tail-between-legs. They oozed palpable, smellable fear. “I love having (insert name) in class,” I would begin. Because it’s true. There’s a reason each of them is in my class. Yes, some of them are more… let’s say enjoyable than others. But each is purposefully in my class. “Sometimes he talks, but he’s always willing to move seats when I ask him and his behavior vastly improves when he does,” I would continue, always reaching for the positive. “He’s such a great student, I know we can make things better,” I encouraged, attempting to speak it into existence. “He’s already improving.” The kid would look at me like I’d just handed him a free iPhone, and I could see the fervent agreement in his eyes. The pact had been made. He was going to behave. And to my intense pleasure, he would.
Any kid about whom I gave that speech showed up in class the next day, selected a safe seat located far from friends and paid attention as though graduation depended on it. (Sadly it doesn’t, making it extremely difficult to hold the importance of passing Spanish over anyone’s head.) This positive speak phenomenon floored me. The lesson I learned seemed too easy, too basic. Give a kid some praise and garner his attention in return.