Observations of 8th graders.
Observing students closely has been an interesting experience this semester, eighth graders are a difficult age to observe, so full of hormones and moodiness on their way to negotiating adulthood I can never be sure what I am seeing is a true reflection of their personality or some change happening minute by minute.
It is lunchtime when I enter their school building and I walk along the edge of the cafeteria to get to my classroom, on this journey, I pass by a table of students I will see in class. These are the students who separate themselves through their enjoyment of art and anime. They are often happy and smiling as they enjoy their friends and their lunch period and then ten minutes later the surly, sullen and glum versions of themselves appear for class. One of them won’t even talk to me, so I have left her alone. It makes me feel useless not to be able to talk, but I don’t know her history. I have specifically sought out conversations with these edge students and, often, been shut out of meaningful conversation. I think it is a reaction to my adulthood and their adolescence. They are all generally bright and good students from what I have observed and the limited interaction they have allowed me.
The classroom I have been observing this semester does not integrate much technology into the classroom experience. All the students have their obligatory Chromebook, the teacher presents most information in this Social Studies class on a white board. I have been in her class two hours a day through the month of February and I have been in class with all her students. I have talked to a good cross section of them during that time. I have specifically sought out shy students, bold students, artistic ones and ball jockeys, I have not let race or gender influence who I speak with or what I speak with them about.
A few general observations have surprised me about them. First, they all have cell phones, this did not surprise me, neither did their use of cell phones to answer some of the more arcane questions that would arise. What did surprise me was how these 13/14 year old young people were seemingly on the cusp of wanting/needing the authentic experience. The experience of an authentic place. When I asked one girl about her video gaming experience she said she did not play video games, I believed her. The artistically talented kids also seemed to reinforce this perspective, being content to sketch and draw as much as play games on the computer. I strongly believe in a pendulum theory, where interests and concerns swing from one trend to another, I wondered if this was the generation that would treat electronic connections with disdain. Would they be the equivalent of the early 70’s generation who grew up with the tv on in the background of every life event and was an integral part of modern life but had started to find out that the promise of tv was empty and isolating. I will never know the answer to that question, mostly because I like to ask questions more than I like answering them. But I do think that this pendulum may be swinging again.
This blog will be as much about the age transition as much as anything. Eighth graders are unique, not yet fully jaded about adulthood and not quite ready to leave behind the behaviors of childhood that have served them up to this point.
This blog would have been, in my almost 30 hours in their classroom, my take-away from the experience, but then I went into the classroom yesterday and it was almost if there was an electronics explosion. Everywhere, in both classes, the students were on their laptops and cellphones doing research on their group topics and people to contact regarding their topics. They were working in groups of 4-6, I worked with them to refine their topic and focus on the individuals and groups they needed to contact. Within each group I noticed a leader step forward, or more precisely answer first when I walked up to their group and started quizzing them about their topic and their approach. I found that an interesting dynamic. I helped some, gave clues to others as to where they might find more information, and some where we simply bounced ideas around. One student found quickly that even elected officials have accessible twitter and facebook accounts and was so excited when she received a reply from Senator Portman via her e-mail. One girl had to try her phone call three times because she kept getting nervous and hanging up. It was one of those fun moments in the class that I really enjoyed.



