Working with kids for May Project did not
even feel like a choice to me; I feel like I’ve known for years I’d end up with
kids because the work environment at a preschool or elementary school fits my
personality well and playing with kids feels natural, not like work at all to
me. After my sponsor at U City
Childrens’ Center, Tameka, led to the baby room and we peeked in the window to
see the little one year olds rolling around and chewing on plastic toys,
mentioning as a side note that that room needed the most help, I halfheartedly volunteered
for that room without even thinking, assuming she’d say, “that’s sweet of you
to offer, we’ll keep that in mind. Let’s check out the 3-4 year old room and
decide at the end.” She did not say this. She said, “Perfect- let’s introduce
you to everyone!” I failed to
consider my lack of experience with any children under the age of three,
knowledge about their eating and sleeping habits, and the fact that I had just
agreed to spend forty hours in this room in which I’d glanced for maybe three
seconds.
The
room into which I nervously walk, called the Milkyway (each room is named
something space-themed) after putting on special shoe covers to protect the
kids from germs, has “big kid toys” (toys for the two year olds) in the back,
high chairs and a mini table by the window, colorfully-padded floors and walls,
a walled off napping area with cribs and cots with soothing music always
playing, big colorful plastic balls to toss in a designated area, and a
bathroom (that doesn’t lock so you have to alert everyone in your room and our
neighboring room that you’re using the “potty” as most of the teachers call
it).
My
three supervisors and I represent I think the four types of teachers you might
immediately expect at a preschool: Me, a chipper, teenage volunteer still
learning the ropes but willing to conquer any task, Anne, a twenty-something
just starting out work, Caroline, a middle aged mom (basically a self-taught
preschool teacher from her experiences as a mother), and Becky, a loopy, loud,
and filter-less older woman who can make a one year old stop crying in a matter
of seconds with a single facial contortion. From the time I arrive to the time I leave all three take
hour long breaks one by one, so I never see all three of them at once but
rather the three of them in three different combinations of two. As a
volunteer, I mainly stay in the background, playing with the happy kids or
cleaning up while the teachers sort out real conflicts or execute more
important projects. For this
reason, they assume I don’t listen when they gossip about the third teacher
currently on break. “Caroline never told
us she was taking the weekend off.” “Glad Anne’s back from visiting that crazy
family of hers.” “Becky is insane.” The kids also have not begun really talking
yet, so the kids are fair game for complaints and jokes as well. It’s hard not to start cracking up at
any given moment.
Clara, thanks for the post. This is exactly why I prefer that students blog. Your description is thoughtful and hysterical!
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