On Tuesdays, Two Writing Teachers hosts the Slice of Life. Everyone is welcome to share writing and comment on others in this special community.
The doctor's office called at 7:50 yesterday morning to cancel my 11am appointment. Not a big deal, except that it's a two-hour drive with traffic factored in. Given the ride home, as well, I had taken the day off. Faced with the dilemma of not going to school or going, I went.
I hadn't paid any attention to the events of Monday-- I wasn't planning to be there!-- but when the halls were quiet and the classrooms were empty, I figured there must be an assembly. Which one? As I approached the gym, it dawned on me. The talent show.
The annual talent show never fails to surprise me, and this year's was no exception.
- One sixth-grader who is still non-verbal and bigger than all her teachers danced with paras and other students. Her mom was there to video, but had to wipe tears now and then. Until this year, B. tantrummed about coming to school, and her mother brought her and left her every day.
- Two fifth-grade girls demonstrated and explained wrestling poses. While I couldn't make eye contact with other adults-- (the person next to me couldn't either but I saw her phone screen as she was reading someone else in the gym's text about the morning porn) I had to give them credit for the commitment to being on stage, the boundaries pushed to participate in wrestling, and the accuracy of explanations. All that being said, I don't think any of the first-graders left the show ready to try out the demonstrated pins.
- A couple of girls acted out a comedy skit they'd written. The skit about a singing lesson was funny. We don't have any play-writing in our curriculum--- I'd love to teach that!-- and I'd love to see their script. I might work to track that down...
- After many sub-par performances, a fairly quiet sixth-grader closed the show with her rendition of Defying Gravity. Describing it to my family over dinner, they didn't believe me when I said that this kid nailed the last notes. Fortunately, the principal was only a text away, and she sent me the video. "She needs to keep singing," my daughter said.
First, your first line made me grateful. My husband is recovering from back surgery and the top knotch Georgetown MedStar hospital is 15 minutes away and the PT he gets to attend 2x a week is only 2 miles away. So grateful for closeby help. Thanks for describing the Talent Show. My school is in year 6 and we are still creating traditions. Adding a Talent Show has only been mentioned. Your post is nudging me to get such an event on out school calendar for next year. Fav Line: Students in the audience are compliant and respectful; students on the stage are resilient, creative, and courageous.
ReplyDeleteI happened to be subbing in my former building the day they had their talent show. I agree with your description of it. Our audience cheered and clapped for every act, whether they were stellar or not. Glad you had the same experience, and ended up with a day that emphasized gratitude. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI love this kind of assembly and can’t help but think about the courage all who performed exhibited. It sounds as though the audience has learned how to be good audience members, too. Bravo to the female wrestlers. I wish more girls wrestled. The activity teaches self-defense they’ll likely need later in life.
ReplyDeleteI love this post! And I'm with the other commenters. I can't help but enjoy a talent show. Yes, some will be duds. Yes, some will be amazing. There's just such an earnestness about the whole thing, both for the performers, and for the audience who (usually!) wants the folks on stage to be great.
ReplyDeleteReminds me of when I did a mime routine at the camp talent show. Which DEFINITELY tested the kindness of my audience...
^^yeah, that was me...
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