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Published: 2014-02-22 23:16:00 +0000 UTC; Views: 4382; Favourites: 127; Downloads: 0
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Today in math class, they would be learning how to factor quadratic equations. Miss Gracie, called Mrs. G by her students, knew this because she had the lesson planned out meticulously across three-and-a-half sheets of college-ruled notebook paper, which sat neatly in a folder before her. She knew because, like with all her lessons, she had recited it in front of her dressing mirror last night, right before bed.
She glanced at the clock. Ten minutes left until class. Its tick, tick, tick was the only sound in the room.
She looked around the room. Nothing but the equation charts that she covered with long sheets of colored paper during tests (always to the dismay of the students) and Tu fui, ego eris. Latin. What you are, I was; what I am, you will be. She stared at it. She had written it out on a sheet of white cardstock and stuck it to the wall with blue tape on her first day. It seemed like a kind and encouraging quote, a reflection on how ideally, the student would someday become the master. Only yesterday did she learn that it was actually a phrase that had been written on tombstones.
Her students seemed not to notice the phrase. Nor did the administrator, who walked in one day without warning to see “how well you were teaching the material.” The administrator had eyes the color of sour apples, and a mouth that was puckered like she’d eaten a sour apple, and had told her that she couldn’t teach proofs because they a) weren’t in the curriculum and b) wouldn’t be on the state exams and were thus irrelevant, all in the disgruntled voice of someone who’d expected a sweet apple but gotten a sour one.
Irrelevant! Miss Gracie breathed in sharply. The word seemed to be everywhere. When she handed out her weekly quizzes, which no one was allowed to use calculators on, the students always complained. Miss, how is this relevant to our real lives? We can just use a calculator in real life. That’s what one student said. She said there wouldn’t always be calculators. But there’s one on my phone, he said.
The administrator would probably tell her to go ahead and let them use calculators, because they could on the state exams. The parents who phoned her every time progress reports went out probably would say the same. Never mind that the quizzes were composed of arithmetic questions like 25 x 80 and not higher algebra.
What were they studying today? Quadratic equations, and no one would be allowed to use calculators. They were very simple quadratic equations, really, that required logic and a basic sense of how numbers fit into each other, like (x + 2)(x -3) = x2 – x – 6. Everything in math can be boiled down into how numbers fit into each other, she’d told the class one day. That’s why I have you take these quizzes, to build up your number sense. They’d sat and stared at her without seeing her. In the back row, one student played with her phone under her desk.
Her quizzes had a reputation in the school. Before the administrator walked in and told her proofs were irrelevant, she had also sometimes included proofs on the quizzes. Nothing complicated, just questions like Prove that if n is an integer such that n2 is even, then n is even too. She’d even walked them through a very similar question the other day. It was all algebra. Why weren’t proofs relevant? But her quizzes were infamous, and on the day the administrator told her proofs were irrelevant, one student had cheered.
Tick, tick, tick. Five minutes until class began.
At this moment, she could have been studying for her doctorate in mathematics, probably bent double over a desk and sometimes straightening to sip a cup of hot tea, like she liked to in college. (She liked to think that she would have attended Columbia.) But she had chosen to take Mathematics in Higher Education instead of Applications of Higher Mathematics and go right to teaching before pursuing higher degrees because she had wanted to “make a difference.” Maybe she should have taken Teaching Elementary Mathematics instead. Maybe that would have made a difference.
It probably wouldn’t, her mind added.
She closed her eyes. Time seemed to crawl; she breathed in, a slow gasp, feeling her lungs expand. She’d never noticed how tight her ribs were before. Above her the clock tick, tick, ticked like dripping water, slower and slower. Tick, tick, drip. The dry air sandpapered her throat on the way down. She breathed out, exhaling too small an amount of air.
What were the teaching plans for today? She tried to remember without looking at her notes. Something about factorials… no, factoring. Factoring of quadratic equations. Factorials were years later, in calculus. So were proofs. Tick, drip. Yes, that was it. She needed to get herself together before her students arrived. They would come in here, and while she thought, they would hide their homework under their desks and copy off of each other. All while she tried to remember what her lesson plans were. What kind of teacher was she?
What would the administrator say when her class’s state exam scores came back in? Abysmal. She would look at her with those beady sour apple eyes. The parents would phone her, asking why she’d let their children fail.
Miss Gracie tried to think about quadratic equations, and (x + 2)(x -3) = x2 – x – 6. But all she could imagine were tombstones, little white tombstones in the shape of rectangles and narrow trapezoids and triangles in overgrown grass, tombstones all inscribed with “Tu fui, ego eris.” Dozens and dozens of tombstones, as far as the eye could see.
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Comments: 59
LiliWrites In reply to ??? [2014-05-08 07:38:54 +0000 UTC]
When I was in junior year I took a class that introduced you to various careers in public education. Being literary minded, I chose to explore what it might be like to be an English teacher for middle schoolers. I thank that class for making sure I never destroyed the confidence a bunch of teenagers who couldn't figure out how to use commas.
Well written, and an interesting statement about the problems with standardized testing. Congrats on your DD!
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Falareste In reply to LiliWrites [2014-05-12 00:46:12 +0000 UTC]
Thank you. Teaching was a field I'd considered, as well--however, I was terrified of destroying a budding writer's confidence or forcing them to adopt my own style of writing (a fear that I still possess), and on top of that, kept drawing blanks whenever I tried to critique another writer's work. It felt like being asked to critique a mortar wall with a toothpick. (That doesn't make sense, but somehow, it feels right.) So I thought, if anything, I'd be a math teacher instead, but then I observed a number of things in education that I, to say the least, felt I wouldn't be able to tolerate. So no teaching for me.
Thank you again--for the support and the suggestion.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
LiliWrites In reply to Falareste [2014-05-12 05:23:17 +0000 UTC]
So now I'm curious. What did you end up doing with your education?
My pleasure!
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
riparii [2014-02-24 01:40:37 +0000 UTC]
Nicely written, never thought of math as having entertainment value before. Works very well.
I couold make a couple editorial comments but since you didn't ask for critique I won't.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Falareste In reply to riparii [2014-02-24 03:25:06 +0000 UTC]
Thanks! And critique is absolutely welcome- sorry, I should have mentioned that.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
riparii In reply to Falareste [2014-02-24 14:10:46 +0000 UTC]
Just a few nitpicks really, like you say that the students call her 'Mrs G' although her name is Miss Gracie, but the one time a student does address her, it's as 'Miss.'
'Sour apple' gets repeated a few times early on in the same section, which didn't bother me too much because it worked in developing the sour image of the administrator. But it put me a little bit on alert for other repetitions, and particularly this one " ...like she liked to in college. (She liked to think..." jumped out at me as a 'like' or two too many.
The phrase "...her mind involuntarily added." got me thinking about whether or not a mind would involuntarily make conversational remarks to itself. I don't know, it struck me as awkward and not quite an accurate use of the word.
Other than that, I who hates math was pretty captivated by the naturalness, grace and understatement of this little story. Love the subtlety with which you handled the emotions, and the great, great tombstone metaphor.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Falareste In reply to riparii [2014-02-25 04:31:56 +0000 UTC]
Thanks for the critique!
About the Mrs./Miss disconnect: it was actually something I added upon editing, upon remembering how the high-schoolers I encountered always interchanged them. I did wonder if it would wind up being awkward or seen as non-deliberate, though, so it's good to hear feedback on that.
Likewise, I had the story workshopped in class prior to submitting it to dA- the sour apple image, interestingly enough, was a point of contention. Some people liked it, and some people thought it was distracting. I wound up deciding to leave it in to see if people who were casually reading would notice it, or feel it was out of place.
You do have a point on "involuntarily." I may change that if I do another editing pass on the story.
Thanks as always for the praise and support. ^^
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
riparii In reply to Falareste [2014-02-25 13:09:59 +0000 UTC]
I first thought the sour apple thing didn't work
but when I paid attention I decided it did.
It's funny in a horrible way how in workshop/critique groups
you end up with opinions split like that, exactly in half. This is helpful how??
You're welcome, it is a good read.
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
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