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What Makes America Great


Today, on the last day of school, we had several special visitors taking a tour of the building. The school I teach at specializes in non-native English speakers, recently arrived immigrants, refugees from war zones, and other historically under-served minorities. The amount of racial, cultural, ethnic, and linguistic diversity is staggering. This coming year, we are expanding to include a classroom strictly for kids who have just recently arrive in the US and don't have enough language and cultural knowledge to be in a mainstream classroom. Included in this group are several Syrian refugee children who had arrived in the United States several months ago and will be starting school with us in the fall in this program. They got to see the whole building and watch a few minutes of classes to see what school in like in America. 

 
When they came up to my room where I was teaching a small group, I noticed that one of the Syrian boys (maybe about 9 years old or so) couldn't stop smiling while he was looking around. He was giggling to himself and soaking in everything around him; the posters on the wall, the displayed artwork of students, the computers, everything. I heard him whisper something to the interpreter, and the interpreter translated it to the teacher leading the group as "he says, everything is so nice and pretty here". When I heard that I had to stop for a second. Our school is far from what I would consider nice. It's in a converted factory building in a industrial neighborhood with a lot of decay and blight. The inside is all unpolished concrete floors with walls that desperately need a new paint job. But to this kid, who came from hell on Earth, it was probably what he dreamed of always having. It was an opportunity he is probably overjoyed to have in a strange new country after being forced from everything he has ever known. Here we are, in our tiny little corner of this big city, about to hopefully give him, and other like him, a new opportunity in life. It's little moments like this that make all the stresses of this job worth it.
 
I think it also sends an important message to refugees and immigrants like them that they are wanted here. Despite what our con man president and his hicks in the sticks supporters say, America will still welcome you and give you a chance to succeed. You can find peace and stability and your kids will have the opportunity to become even greater then you. We all need to take up that mantle as Americans.
 
 “Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed, to me: I lift my lamp beside the golden door.” 
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AC Benus

Posted (edited)

Ms. Lazarus (the poet you cite) would be proud of you for doing this :) 

 

 

Edited by AC Benus
  • Like 5
Dodger

Posted

What a wonderful thought inspiring blog. We take a lot for granted and often complain when it doesn't live up to our high expectations. I could imagine this kid walking around in awe of the facilities, which by your description a lot of people, like me, would have complained about.

  • Like 3
Carlos Hazday

Posted

Thank you for sharing, Matt. We can't always solve the big problems, but often we can make a difference with a small gesture. Sorry for focusing on a small aspect of your comments:

 

Quote

with walls that desperately need a new paint job

 

1. Do you have your own classroom?

2. If so, can you recruit some friends to provide manual labor?

3. If you do and you start a Go Fund Me campaign to pay for paint and supplies, I'll pledge $100.00 to it. If I was closer I'd pitch in and bring my own paint brush.

 

  • Like 5
Hunter Thomson

Posted

Thank you for doing the things you do in your classroom. People forget just how important teachers can be.

  • Like 2
TetRefine

Posted

12 hours ago, Carlos Hazday said:

Thank you for sharing, Matt. We can't always solve the big problems, but often we can make a difference with a small gesture. Sorry for focusing on a small aspect of your comments:

 

 

1. Do you have your own classroom?

2. If so, can you recruit some friends to provide manual labor?

3. If you do and you start a Go Fund Me campaign to pay for paint and supplies, I'll pledge $100.00 to it. If I was closer I'd pitch in and bring my own paint brush.

 

 

This is actually a good idea Carlos. Although if I did, there are much more immediate concerns that the money could be spent on, like basic school supplies and curriculum. It's absolutely ridiculous that despite being one of the top performing schools in the entire city, we can't even afford to hire enough staff and buy updated curriculums. 

 

America, gotta love it...

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