Monday, March 26, 2012

Everything Comes Back to The Hunger Games


March 26, 2012

This was started today while I was sitting at my desk while my student teacher taught.  It’s a little on the random side.

I am sitting at my desk at work.  My student teacher is beginning his instruction on The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins.  I’m nervous about this for several reasons.  The first and foremost being the themes that I had developed and the ideas I had wanted brought up are not happening.  While I am not the queen who dictates exactly how every book in the world should be taught, but come on!  Throw me a bone here and do something thematically.

There is always a risk when you take on a student teacher.  I work with people who absolutely refuse to take one because of the damage that could be done.  Important things not covered or not covered well.  I always volunteer to take a student teacher because I feel obligated.  The only way to learn how to be a teacher is to actually do the job.  That’s how my student teaching was.  I was on my own in a ninth grade English class for twelve weeks at East Hartford High School.  I made tons of mistakes and bombed many lessons, but I think I’m a pretty good teacher now because of it.  Of course, doing student teaching in my current classroom is not necessarily an introduction to teaching reality.  I teach in a relatively separate program for students who have been identified as either gifted or talented.  This is teaching fairy-land.  I have nearly 90 students, all of them bright and (relatively) highly motivated.  This is not reality.  Perhaps I should not offer to take student teachers…

I call it teaching in fairy-land, but I work just as hard as I did when I taught in a mainstreamed classroom.  I just work on different things.  A majority of my time is spent on curriculum and instruction.  I bring the established standards up to the level of my students.  My classroom is full of students with varied abilities and interests.  I spend a lot of time dealing with parents who believe their children are smarter than I give them credit for.  When I taught in a mainstream classroom, I spent a lot of time on classroom management—not necessarily getting the kids to behave but to actually do the work.  I also spent a fair bit of time “mothering” students.  I’ve decided that I am much better at designing curriculum than mothering other people’s children.

Still trying to find the wisdom in what my student teacher is doing to scaffold the book.  I do love this book, but I think it needs a lot of support.  On the surface, it is a book about kids killing other kids in a televised knock-down-drag-out brawl to the death.  Just under the surface is a veritable bubbling cauldron of social and political commentary.  It’s a smart satire on our current love affair with reality TV.  It’s a startling snap shot of our current state of wealthy elite vs. the ever growing number of poor.  It’s about a government brutally exercising its control over its population using force and propaganda.  Unfortunately, while it’s a fun, fast read, most students will focus on the violence and the kissing (yes, there’s kissing), not the reasons for the violence and the kissing.  I’m afraid the kids aren’t getting enough scaffolding or enough of the right scaffolding.  But I have to let it go because he’s got to cope with this.  It’s his class.  (I’ll probably talk to him tomorrow about it).

John and I went to see the movie yesterday.  Craig watched the kids for us, and we caught the 11:30 a.m. showing.  It wasn’t crowded, which was good.  I liked the movie, but I’m trying to decide if I LOVED it.  There were things that translated well and things that didn’t.  There were things that were added that made sense and helped in telling the story, and there were things that were taken away that didn’t make sense. 

I do have a couple of Hunger Games movie wishes:

1.        I wish Katniss’s prep team was in the movie more.  They’re not really needed in the movie and would have added to the two hours and twenty minutes of the movie.  I just like them.  While they were written as stark, stereotypical characters, they amused me.  I think the movie needed some more (any) comic relief.

2.       I wish there had been more of Cinna.  He really is important to the plot of the whole series, and the movie marginalized him.  It needed him.  And besides which, what movie wouldn’t be vastly improved by more Lenny Kravitz with gold eyeliner?  Seriously.

John says he’d like to see the movie again, but not until it comes out on dvd.  I’d like to see it again sooner, but will probably end up waiting until then, too.

The question has come up as to whether or not to take our students to see the movie while it is in the theaters.  I had wanted to see it before I said yes or no.  Now I’ve seen it, I don’t know.  While you never actually see any physical blows during the movie, there is never any doubt that there is violence going on.  You don’t even really need to use your imagination to picture it.  It’s spelled out very carefully.  The kissing aspect is fine—not too much (not as much as was in the book).  It’s the violence that I would really need to think seriously about before I took students.

A friend and I were talking about this.  While neither one of us objects to our students seeing the movie, we felt that it would be better seen with parents.  Neither one of use wants to the be the person in charge of bringing the kids to see this movie.  And it’s not that these students have never seen violence; the video games they describe are frightening enough.  It’s that the violence is perpetrated by children against children, some of whom actually enjoy the games.  It’s easy to miss the point that the government is forcing the children to do so and that it has created a culture in which it is appropriate (even educational) fodder for public viewing. 

And that, my friends, is why the book needs to be scaffolded well.  J

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