The Puppet Show

This afternoon, as I was drawing lines of longitude and latitude on the board, and the kids were taking notes, Mack said, “Could you MOVE?”

To me.

This is how this group of kids talks to each other and to me. And you know, I’ve had conversations about speaking politely and treating others the way you want to be treated and using school-appropriate language, tone, and volume.

Nothing.

So when he said that, I pulled out my most caricaturish polite voice and said:

“Amy (the kids call us by our first names at this school), would you mind taking two tiny steps to the left so I can see the fascinating lesson you’re demonstrating on the board and I can write all this interesting stuff down? If you could do that, that would be wonderful. And by the way, you’re such a great teacher. I appreciate all that you do for us.”

He looked at me like I had stuck a fist up my nose.

But.

But.

Later on, I heard some of the kids saying to each other during the read aloud, “So-and-so, would you mind sitting back down? It’s hard for me to see the pictures when you’re up in front like that.”

Wow. Modeling works. If it’s ridiculously over the top. When I told her about this incident, my friend Sam called it “the puppet show”.

Yes. Something that works.

3 thoughts on “The Puppet Show”

  1. That’s a great example. I wonder if it would work in my class. I was practically yelling at one of my classes today, they were so loud and obnoxious, and these “kids” are 19-21 years old. Really frustrating, and many of them need a lesson in manners, and I’m not sure they will do well when they get into the workforce because of it.

  2. amy i can’t remember my password and dr d says she never got one. you are dissing your two biggest fans

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