When Ms. A left for her maternity leave in February, she shared her online lesson plan calendar with both me and Ms. S (the sub before me). I saved the link someplace handy, and I didn't glance at it again. Until I started the long-term assignment.
On the first day I was in class, I noted the pacing of the teaching of The Great Gatsby for the eleventh grade classes. I noted that the ninth grade class would be reading Of Mice and Men starting that week. (I've taught both these books before, so I was prepared.)
However, the tenth grade class had nothing listed to do. Well, the first days I was there they were finishing up an argumentative essay, but for my second week, there was nothing in the plans. A big, fat blank.
Um...
I didn't even know what Ms. A had intended for them. With the other classes, if something wasn't filled in, I could easily figure out how to fill some time as I had a topic on which to base things on. But not so for the tenth graders. Were they going to read a book? Were we going to do grammar lessons? A writing assignment? I had no clue.
Ms. A sent me a text saying she'd fill in the tenth grade plans. But she was cutting it pretty close. I mean, she's at home with a newborn and a toddler. I don't expect her to work. But I do need some guidance as to what to assign the kiddos.
Then, Tuesday morning, a lesson plan appeared. Whew. Since my first block is planning time, I clicked on the links to get things set up for the day. Only, the links said I did not have access. Sigh.
But she had texted me to let me know to text her questions I had. So, I texted that I needed access to the material. Her response: "Oops. Geez."
It's always the obvious things that slip through the cracks.
Now I know what our unit is on. Short stories. So, now I have a topic with which to work. Yay!
(We were reading "The Interlopers". I had not read it before, so it was new to all of us.)
Today's A to Z Challenge post brought to you by the letter
Text for help, what a good title. Luckily your text did bring help. whew!
ReplyDeleteI'm glad that you both got it worked out.
ReplyDeleteAt least she was available, I would expect some on leave wouldn't be. I am not familiar with The Interlopers. I just looked it up. While another oldie, the premise (at least of enemies trapped together, depending on each other) could certainly fit any time period.
ReplyDeleteI've been very careful not to contact her because of the leave. (Although, I just saw her 10 minutes ago on campus. She was picking something up.) If she hadn't texted me with the invitation about questions, I probably wouldn't have texted.
DeleteAn oops when you've just had a new baby (and a toddler) is understandble. I'm glad you got filled in though!
ReplyDeleteYeah, I wouldn't have been shocked if she never got around to lesson planning. I mean, lesson planning while on leave? Of course things can slip.
DeleteOh my goodness, that was an unexpected ending to the short story! I bet that made it a bit of a hit with the students.
ReplyDeleteIt was hard to tell. They aren't very vocal about anything. Sigh.
DeleteYou do enjoy some adventures. :) Thank you for the kind words about my husband's health. Best wishes, my dear.
ReplyDeleteThanks. Take care.
DeleteGatsby and Men & Mice are all interesting interludes, I hope.
ReplyDeleteI hope they enjoy them. I've read them before.
DeleteShort stories. Always fun to write.
ReplyDeleteLoved "Of Mice and Men," by the way.
Hi Liz - I need to look at 'The Interlopers' - always interesting to see what people are reading ... and The Great Gatsby and Of Mice and Men (no 'T there!') ... cheers and yes sounds an interesting challenge - glad it was sorted - cheers HIlary
ReplyDeleteSo glad this all turned out OK in the end :-) Hope they all enjoy their readings!
ReplyDeleteSo far, the 11th graders aren't enjoying Gatsby. Sigh.
DeleteI decided to read the story and got so taken up in it that I couldn't remember your post, lol, and what I wanted to comment about. So here goes- not surprised that the teacher you are subbing for was just a little distracted! This comment is about the story. Interesting that with all the footnotes, they didn't explain what a Sylvester Night was. Now I know. Interesting,
ReplyDeleteFootnotes? Interesting. Our version didn't have footnotes. (I should look more closely at what I linked to, eh?)
DeleteI always loved teaching short stories. You can read them together because they're shorter and they can be so powerful. @samanthabwriter from
ReplyDeleteBalancing Act
Yeah, and you can dig into them more than a novel.
Delete