Which Table Did You Sit At?

My students are currently working on a multi-cultural project, and one of the essays that they’re reading has to do with segregation at the school lunch table. Not just segregation between races, but between all of those ubiquitous clique- clichés: the jocks, the metal heads, the nerds (The Breakfast Club lives on) etc.

I thought back to my own high school experience, wondering if I would still choose to sit at the same “table” today. But the interesting thing about my high school (which was a home-school setting for grades 9-10, a private school setting for grades 11-12) table was that, ironically, there wasn’t much of a choice. It was either me, my mom and two brothers conversing about our day before facing the dreaded Becca Math books in the afternoon or, later, it was me and my eighteen (yes, that was our entire class of ’99) fellow classmates sandwiched in at the only class table in the cafeteria.

Despite the laughable Saved By The Bell setting of my high school, I like the fact that it forced me to interact with people who I wouldn’t necessarily have hung out with if given a choice. If it would have been up to me, I would have surrounded myself with the type of kids that I gravitated towards during my last stint at public school, mostly artists and would-be 90’s hippies who listened to Nirvana and wore lots of tie-dye and sunflower babydoll dresses. But they were nowhere to be found, and my private school cafeteria table forced me to hang with the sporty kids, the goof-offs, the uber-conservative, straight-A kids. I think the experience contributed to what makes me a good teacher. I’d like to think that I’m able to see past the stereotypes that are so persuasive in life and truly appreciate the individual for who he/she is. It was good to be thrust from that comfort zone early in life; it made the road ahead a bit less bumpy.

So…what table were you at? If given the choice, would you still sit there today?
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Published on May 01, 2015 07:53
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message 1: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Cole I would've killed to be at your high school ;-)


message 2: by Tabitha (new)

Tabitha Vohn Kevin wrote: "I would've killed to be at your high school ;-)"

Yay! Kevin's back :0)

Bad high school experience, huh?


message 3: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Cole I liken school to prison - you don't get to choose who's next to you ;-)

Thanks, glad to be back :-)


message 4: by Tabitha (new)

Tabitha Vohn Kevin wrote: "I liken school to prison - you don't get to choose who's next to you ;-)

Thanks, glad to be back :-)"


Too funny!


message 5: by [deleted user] (new)

Very interesting blogpost and experience, Tabitha. I guess it was a learning experience for you and the others who shared the table back then!
Also nice to have such tasks to your students, they may learn a lot thinking about it and writing about it. Segregation can happen for many reasons, like you said, for stereotyped vision we have of the others, but I also believe it happen because of mindsets being completely different. It may not be so easy to connect with people if there isn't common ground... And in such environment as you have been, you guys had no choice but to search for connection on the common ground of the class :)

I second what Kevin said - I also liken school to prison... I loved to study back then - and still do to this day, but despite my getting along with anybody being very good, I never felt truly connected with those I shared a class with (except for two individuals along several years!). And, I just couldn't wait for the high school to finish :P The last year just sucked the hell out of me.


message 6: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Cole Isis wrote: "Very interesting blogpost and experience, Tabitha. I guess it was a learning experience for you and the others who shared the table back then!
Also nice to have such tasks to your students, they ma..."


I'm sure Isis was a cold-hearted phoenix her last year of high school ;-)


message 7: by [deleted user] (new)

Kevin, I wish I had been - ahahaha :D Nej, was just a usual good - bored to death - girl! :D


message 8: by Tabitha (new)

Tabitha Vohn Isis wrote: "Very interesting blogpost and experience, Tabitha. I guess it was a learning experience for you and the others who shared the table back then!
Also nice to have such tasks to your students, they ma..."


You know, as much as I appreciated my rag-tag group of friends in high school, I remember feeling like the teachers saw us as sub-human and didn't want to take our opinions seriously. In that respect, school had it's prison-like qualities. And if knowledge is not meant to be questioned and debated then I don't know how one truly learns, you know?


message 9: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Cole Tabitha wrote: "Isis wrote: "Very interesting blogpost and experience, Tabitha. I guess it was a learning experience for you and the others who shared the table back then!
Also nice to have such tasks to your stud..."


This must be why your students love you :-)


message 10: by Tabitha (new)

Tabitha Vohn Kevin wrote: "Tabitha wrote: "Isis wrote: "Very interesting blogpost and experience, Tabitha. I guess it was a learning experience for you and the others who shared the table back then!
Also nice to have such ta..."



Aw, I hope so :P


message 11: by [deleted user] (new)

Hi Tabitha, sorry my delay ^.^
Yes, there is this thing too about teachers. Some are excellent, memorable and really care about their students - like I think both you and Kevin are ^.^

But there are others who are there just to fill the hours, seems like it...

So how did the essay activity turn out? That sounded like an activity I'd love to participate if I had been at your class :)


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