Shaking things up with Shakespeare
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Sue Clark
Alnida Broughton, one of the most positive and passionate teachers
at my school, decides she wants to create a Shakespeare class for the
students. Creekside High School is a continuation school, meaning we
receive kids who are struggling at the four traditional high schools
in the Irvine School District. More than likely, they’ve endured
Shakespeare previously and ardently hope to avoid it while with us.
“Great idea,” is my response, and together we write a curriculum.
Some of the plays Broughton will cover are “Hamlet,” “Macbeth” and,
my personal favorite, “Romeo and Juliet.”
I’ve seen Broughton in action teaching her classes. If I had the
chance to choose one teacher in the entire district for my daughter
to have had, it would be she. I’ve seen Broughton jump up on a chair
to make a point, and I know she dances and leaps for joy if a student
does well. I’ve heard her Monday mantra sung to a sluggish,
partied-out group: “Monday is my favorite day of the week! Let’s get
going!” The students gag, but they get going.
The noise I hear when I walk by her classes is that rare
educational sound of kids talking, arguing, defending and disagreeing
-- the sound of learning.
Broughton is smart, funny, yet professional, almost a throwback to
the one-room schoolmarm. Yes, she is kind, but don’t think she won’t
holler at someone if they are disrespectful. If they walk away,
she’ll follow them down the hall. You really don’t want to mess with
her. When our school had an old tradition of no mandatory homework,
she began teaching at our site and promptly demanded it. Many other
teachers followed suit. Shakespeare would be no different.
We handpicked the first class. It is a powerful thing to tell a
student they’ve been picked for their potential to handle a
challenging curriculum. Broughton, our assistant principal and I used
a combination of logic and intuition to create the classes.
One platinum-haired sleepy surfer said, “Who me?” A pale, thin
girl profoundly depressed and making a series of disastrous decisions
appeared equally shocked, yet rose to the occasion. A wannabe “thug”
took the class four quarters in a row, studying each play until we
forced him out to make room for some others. The self-fulfilling
prophecy was at work.
Broughton does all the hard stuff, and I get the fun of being the
“warmup act.” When the students start Hamlet, I drop in and pose this
question: “What would you do if your Dad died under suspicious
circumstances and your uncle moved in with your mom?” They don’t like
this one bit. In fact, they freak.
“Dude, that is just sick,” groans a disgusted boy. There are
mumbles of agreement.
“Would that be depressing for you?”
“Totally. I’d kick that guy’s [expletive] , too.”
Then I talk about how I’d treat Hamlet and Ophelia in my private
practice today. I talk about antidepressant treatment and whether
Hamlet would benefit from it. We discuss girls’ self-esteem issues.
It’s a good chance to segue to what to do if a student knows someone
who might be suicidal. Kids bring up questions about the legality of
a man’s brother marrying his wife. Others ask about whether an
antidepressant is addictive or ask to see me later in my office. It’s
loud and lively.
When the class starts “Macbeth,” my question is this: “Girls, do
you want to be the power behind the throne, or own your own throne?”
They usually aren’t sure what this saying means. We talk about Nancy
Reagan and Hillary Clinton, and the girls’ own boyfriends. I ask the
boys what kind of wife or girlfriend they want. (If they say they
want a subservient one, they usually get shouted down.) I bring up
guilt and the lust for power. A debate rages over Banquo’s ghost
scene. Sometimes we discuss obsessive-compulsive disorder and Lady
Macbeth’s hand-washing problem.
The class is currently one of the most popular on campus. A
Literary Club was formed from a nucleus of interested members, and
they’ve raised enough money to attend Vanguard University’s upcoming
production of “Macbeth.” “Dressing for the theater means khakis, not
jeans,” the girls tell the guys.
“Khakis?” grumbles a boy. “What about nice jeans, no holes?” A
Shakespearean chorus of no’s ensues. My task is to go look for a
tailored skirt, since my taste, like theirs, runs to jeans. I have
one that used to fit, but it was a bit snug in the waist.
“Oh, that this too solid flesh would melt.”
* SUE CLARK is a Newport Beach resident and a high school guidance
counselor at Creekside High School in Irvine.
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