IN THE CLASSROOM -- Laughter and Thanksgiving
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* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which a Daily Pilot writer
visits a Newport-Mesa school and writes about the experience.
Chery Weaver is not your typical teacher. She doesn’t over-enunciate
when speaking to her first-grade students at Page Private School. She
doesn’t talk down the slightest bit.
Weaver is, instead, subtly sarcastic with dry humor and a straight
face. Her students find her funny.
During Monday morning’s lesson on Thanksgiving, she asked them about
the pilgrims’ journey from England and their life in America. She
good-naturedly teased the first-graders when they suggested that turkeys
were a crop.
Then came the crafts. Weaver passed out construction paper, each with
outlines of an American Indian’s headband and feathers in assorted
colors. The assignment was to cut out the headband and the feathers,
paste them onto the band and wear them.
“You get what you get and you like it,” she said, explaining that no
one was to trade papers, only individual feathers.The first-graders
mimicked her, all the while laughing: “You get what you get!”
Soon, there was chaos. Laughter erupted -- often for no apparent
reason -- and children jumped out of their seats. The students seemed to
forget, with scissors and glue sticks in hand, the rules and manners that
come with being in school. But they had fun.
Wesley Krautkramer taped his eyes shut. Victoria Smith wrapped a
lavender sweater around her head and was asked to leave the room for a
few minutes. And Funmi Kalejaiye illegally swapped headbands with a
friend. She was only allowed to trade feathers, remember?
Weaver asked, “Is that a feather? That long thing?”
To Wesley’s tape prank, she quipped, “It doesn’t even work on your
mouth.”
When students waved scissors in the air, she said, “I want to see you
all walk out with 10 fingers.”
She reminded the first-graders that they had only five feathers each,
so if one of them somehow ended up with six, she would take one away.
When one little boy asked Weaver to staple his headband because he
couldn’t estimate the diameter of his head, Weaver said, “I’ll just glue
it to your head. Wanna wear it all day?”
Her young audience found her hilarious -- even when she didn’t mean to
be.
Toward the end of class, Weaver announced, “Someone stole my stapler!”
Victoria squealed with delight, but offered no confession.
FYI
WHO: Chery Weaver’s first-grade class
WHAT: Learning about the pilgrims and Thanksgiving
WHERE: Page Private School in Costa Mesa
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