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Bust the Long Winter Slog

by Mrs. Mimi aka Jennifer Scoggin
 | Mar 11, 2015

Being a teacher means embracing constant change. Yet all too often, teachers are told when, how, and why to change. In this monthly column, Mrs. Mimi takes on creating change for herself by rethinking old practices and redefining teaching on her own terms. 

I feel like I am slogging through my day both literally and metaphorically. Do you? Yes, the weather is getting better (because in a strange, strange way 40 degrees is now the new 70 degrees in my life), but with warmer temperatures comes melting snow and with melting snow comes muddy yards, dirty shoes, and grimy floors. Hence the slogging.

I realized that other parts of my day feel like slogging through the mud as well. I can't decide what to make for dinner because everything sounds so ho-hum. I have no more creative ideas for crafts with my kids because we have been inside for the last jillion days. I am uninspired in my teaching right now because it all feels like the same old same old.

Maybe that's just how March feels and I should go with it, but that's not my personality. I am teaching students important skills and strategies and—because I am unafraid to toot my own horn—I am teaching them pretty darn well. But if my level of engagement and excitement is low, can we guess how those friends sitting around me are feeling? I never want my students to feel like school is the same old same old or that learning to read is a mechanical process free from excitement or passion.

So what's this girl to do? I mean reasonably do in the midst of the 10,000 things teachers are responsible for doing each and every day, slog or no slog. Please note: All slog-busting ideas have been proven effective by some very super colleagues. Also, most of these ideas work best when combined with caffeine.

Go to your local bookstore or library of choice and find a new author, series, or title that you can't wait to share with your friends. Finding a new read is powerful. Children pick up on the authenticity of your enthusiasm. It is catchy. It is motivating. It is slog busting.

Poll your class. What do they want to do as readers? Is there a project they would like to take on? An author they are curious about? Something new they would like to try as readers? Their enthusiasm is authentic. It is also catchy. It is also slog busting.

Make more time for the pieces of your teaching that inspire you the most. Love reading aloud? Me, too. Take a week and make more time for it. Luxuriate in it. No one died from altering their schedule slightly to meet students' (and teachers') needs for just one week. Slog busting.

Whatever you do, resist the temptation to give in to the slog. Reading is dynamic. It is community building and idea triggering. It is not a slog. But be kind to yourself. Forgive yourself for letting the slog momentarily take hold on you. It gets to the best of us.

Mrs. Mimi, aka Jennifer Scoggin, is a teacher who taught both first and second grades at a public elementary school in New York City. She's the author of Be Fabulous: The Reading Teacher's Guide to Reclaiming Your Happiness in the Classroom” and “It's Not All Flowers and Sausages: My Adventures in Second Grade”, which sprung from her popular blog of the same name. Mimi also has her doctorate in education from Teachers College, Columbia University.

 
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