177. The Teachers’ Room

In most schools, there is a place where teachers can go to be away from non-teachers. They sit around a table or on a couch and talk freely. We (I almost wrote “you”) non-teachers are fine people; we shouldn’t be offended. But it’s nice for teachers to know that there is one place where they can hang out and hang loose. The parents may not mean to apply pressure and create stress. The children may really care about their teachers, and want teachers’ lives to be easy. But the teachers’ room, when free of non-teachers, is a place where that lack of stress, that ease can happen.
Teachers are conditioned to speak and behave differently when parents, children and other non-teachers are around. They occasionally change the subject quickly if an outsider enters the room. In many ways, we’re all in the same boat, but there are things teachers just don’t say or do when non-teachers are around. Sometimes a teacher is a parent. One year, I taught in the school where my daughter was a student. I never heard mention of my daughter’s name in the teachers’ room (though I’m quite sure only positive things would have been said about her).
Granted, some of the things said in the teachers’ room may be things that should never be said. They should never even be thought. Occasionally, there are nasty thoughts about people that get verbalized in the teachers’ room, and verbalizing them sometimes does more harm than good. But even some nasty thoughts are better when they’re given some fresh air.
As a volunteer, I sometimes eat lunch with children, and sometimes with teachers. I don’t think I’m being a double agent, and when I spend time with some of the parents after school, I don’t think I’m being a triple agent. Sometimes I invite the principal to parties I have. I don’t think that makes me a quadruple agent.
But there are times when I sense that there is something trying to happen in the teachers’ room, and my presence there is stopping it from happening. I am not employed by the school system. Teachers don’t have to answer to me; I’m not in a position to evaluate them.
But from a teacher’s point of view, maybe I’m someone who will talk to parents about what I hear. Maybe I’ll write an article about it. And so I make a point of listening for those times, and finding a way to make a subtle exit, leaving the teachers’ room as a sanctum. I urge you to do the same. Most of the discussions that take place in that sanctum, whether they’re about teaching or not, help to make school a better place for everyone who enters the building.

Similar Posts

  • 489. Fitting In

    One of the major messages parents and teachers give children is that fitting in is not important – that what’s important is being true to yourself. I think that’s a good and important message, and I’m one of the parents and teachers who deliver it. Sometimes my earnest sermons on personal integrity impress children just…

  • 215. Cumulative Files

    When children take standardized tests, or other pieces of paper deemed significant are produced, those papers are sometimes put into file folders, which are subsequently put into file cabinets. Most of the time, those papers stay there, minding their own business. Most teachers don’t keep checking to review children’s stanine ratings or percentile ranks; most…

  • 64. Look at This!

    Sometimes, a child may come to you and say, “Look at this!” or “Listen to this!” The child has just created or discovered something. Whatever it is may or may not be amazing or even recognizable to you. I have mostly seen and given three categories of reactions. The first type of reaction is typical…

  • 220. Clubs

    I understand why children want to have clubs. Ricky Eugster and I formed the Texas Rangers when we were seven. I was Jase Pearson, and he was Clay Morgan. There were a few other members from time to time. And everybody else wasn’t in the club, so we got to be “us,” and everyone else…

  • 374. The Olden Days

    My friend Molly, who is five years old, occasionally refers to “the olden days.” She heard about them recently, and I think she’s referring to a more specific time period than “olden” denotes. I think she means a time when there were railroads, steam engines, and telegraph wires, but no televisions, cars, or electric lights….