- Salutatorian Katherine McKinley May 23, 2025
The class of 2025 is here, in their regalia, ready to head out into the world. I know some schools still have a few weeks left, but Memorial Day weekend marks the beginning of graduation season. While they look forward, I can't help but look back. As an 8th grade science teacher, I taught 54 of this year's graduating seniors during the hybrid year. There is a bond that can only be created by that kind of stress. Some were at home while others were in the room with me, although we were standing as far apart as a classroom space would allow, we were in it together. Masked and separated by plexiglass, but with a common goal and a common spirit. They had been home since March, so they were excited to see each other again and a little more nervous about what the year might look like than normal. But my biggest memory of them was how game they were. Because we were doing EVERYTHING in new ways, the most common words I said in the first month of the 2020-2021 school year were, "We're going to try it this way. If it works, we'll keep doing it. If not, we'll try something else." And they rolled with it, adapting like champs. At the end of the year, just before they walked out the door, I said, "This year has been hard, but I want to thank you for not using the power you have to make it harder. You guys made it fun."
While all 54 of the ones I taught are special, there are a few that stand out in my memory for different reasons that year, and I want to mention a few.
Collin - Collin is a hard worker, but he is also a goofball - a teacher's favorite combination. Because his elderly grandmother was living with them, he spent the first six weeks of the school year joining my class from his bedroom. At that time, he was the only one virtual in that particular period, so I could see him full screen. Every time I looked at the screen, he was wearing a different hat. He switched from sombrero to cowboy hat to propeller beanie as though it were totally normal. At one point, I looked up to see that he had a yellow duck perched on top of his head. Since I was the only one who could see him, this wasn't a show he was putting on for friends or an attempt to be disruptive. It was purely for my entertainment and his. He says he doesn't remember this, but I do. In a very stressful time, it was a lovely moment of joy.
Marley - I heard so much during the pandemic about how masks prevented people from telling if you were smiling. Marley proved this not to be true. I'll set aside the fact that anyone who smiles only with their mouths is a psychopath (Try it; it's pretty much impossible). Being back in person outweighed any effect not seeing the lower part of the face had. Kids communicate a lot of information in a number of subtle ways, and that had been lost during the virtual spring. Online, I wasn't getting much nonverbal communication at all; in person, I was seeing body language and hearing sounds of confusion or affirmation. Marley, in particular, smiled with every part of her being. Her eyes sparkle; her voice is bright and genuine; her body language is open. She gave this joy to everyone during the pandemic, and she has continued to do so in the four years since.
Emily - Emily is an artist, and that's how she processes the world around her. She draws pictures - pictures of her pets, pictures of her thoughts, pictures of whatever she's looking at - she fills her sketchbook with lots and lots of pictures. During the stress of the pandemic, she became a giver of pictures. I had a stuffed toy lemur named Gus in my classroom, and she drew a picture of him during class one day to gave to me after class. One morning, as she was coming into the building, she asked me what my favorite animal was. When she came to class that afternoon, she gave me a drawing of a panda sleeping on a tree branch. It was stress relief for us both, and I still have those drawings at home.
Haolin - If you are a person who nods along during a presentation, class, or sermon, God bless you. When presenting, it can be hard to know whether what I am saying is landing with listeners, and getting that bit of attentive feedback is useful. Haolin is the world champion of nodding along. He sat in the back of my classroom, in my right peripheral vision, nodding and saying, "Yeah, yeah. Mmm hmm." That little bit of affirmation was so encouraging, and while I have thanked him for it, I don't think he'll ever understand its true value for me.
Kate - The quote at the top of this post from Kate's salutatory address stood out because of what Kate's questions meant to me during the hybrid year. She was in my 6th period class. By that point in each day, teachers were exhausted - not just tired, but depleted of energy. Yet, Kate continued to be curious. She asked interesting questions. She truly wanted to learn more about whatever topic we were covering and had questions about how it applied to things she saw in life. Each day, she reminded me that I was still teaching - not just surviving the year (or the day) but actually teaching students who wanted to learn. I could never thank her enough for that, and I hope she continues to view learning that way throughout her life.
Class of 2025, I can only imagine what it would have been like if I had been teaching a different set of 8th graders during the most difficult year of all of our lives. As hard as it was, your spirit made it worth every exhausting minute.
Thank you.
I love you very much, Ms. Hawks. Your dedication and individual care for us as students will never be forgotten. We miss you already, but you’ve never failed to show up for us even after you’ve left. There’s no GRACE in our hearts without you.
ReplyDelete- Kate McKinley