This has been a pretty good week at school. Miraculously I have had some time during my
planning periods the past few weeks to get the Journalism Work Room and Dark Room
(really a storage room since we don’t work with film photography) mostly
straightened and cleaned up after months—nay, years—of neglect…including
organizing the cabinets and drawers. Now,
as of this week, I have just a couple of drawers and four cabinets to work
through before it’s done! I’m not sure
where all of this spare time is coming from, though. Probably Monday I’ll walk in to an e-mail
message reminding me the Japanese translation of War and Peace I should have been working on for the past month is
due by 3:15. Oops!
But that’s not the only good news on the
school journalism front. I also found
out one of my best writers from Journalism I, whom I also taught in English I
Honors a couple of years ago, will be on next year’s staff. She skipped a year somehow (probably
scheduling), but she’ll be back next year.
And this young lady has already engaged in a partnership with a local
media outlet (which I totally forgot to mention in this week’s discussion board
question about partnerships). This past
year, she has been an intern with the Columbia
Star, a local, independent, weekly newspaper. I’ll definitely be picking her brain to see
if we can take further advantage of the door she’s already opened.
Detail. Gymnasium wall. W.J. Keenan High School. Columbia, South Carolina. 2007.
Photographed by Stephen Milligan (September 30, 2007). |
But wait—there’s more!
Another current journalism student (second
year) asked me this week what Journalism III Honors was—she said when she was
called in by her counselor to make her schedule for next year, that’s the
journalism class she was put into.
And, yes, I am at a school where teachers
aren’t given their teaching schedules for the following year much in advance or
even have much say in it. Some years I’ve
surmised my schedule based on students telling me they were going to be with me
the next year for journalism or English.
But it’s better than it was—the first few years I was there, we received
our teaching schedules in the mail along with our welcome-back letters. In August.
With hardly any time to plan.
But I digress. And this gets even better.
When I went in to see my principal for my final
Goal-Based Evaluation conference for the year, he talked about building up the
journalism program. He pulled out a draft
copy of the master schedule and told me there was room for another journalism
course, which would being me up to three; in fact, he said I currently have
only two English II sections, so this could mean I may…possibly…perhaps…conceivably…perchance
have four journalism courses next
year. The most I’ve ever had is three,
and that was only one year.
Then the other shoe dropped—he would really like to see a broadcasting component in place.
Beggars can’t be choosers, so I guess I’ll
have to take that Kent State broadcasting elective after all.
But imagine what I can do with three or four
journalism courses! Imagine having the time to teach all of the concepts we’ve
been learning about and produce the
publications!
How exciting! And how frightening!
Let’s just hope I’m not getting in over my
head…
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