Friday, December 28, 2012

Two Lilies



When Lily, a student in my History of the Novel class, noted that both of her project partners were unable to help her videotape an interview, I offered to help out.  I'd already thought about observing the observers, going out to watch my students work on the ethnography project I'd assigned.  I had a free period and she needed help.  It seemed like a good moment.

This project asks students to consider how we read in communities and how the individual act of reading becomes a social and communal one.  It invites them to consider what it means when we read together.  Students have chosen groups ranging from 1st graders, to Bible study groups, to an anarchist reading group that won't allow audio or video recording.  They completed observations and interviews, and then made videos to share their findings. 

This has been an experiment for all of us.  I've never done ethnography, and most students haven't done video work. While I tend to enjoy risk and novelty in the classroom, this project has been a stretch. More than once I've wondered if it was too much to ask students to observe a group twice and conduct some follow up interviews.  Yet it also seems like the bare minimum to create an understanding of a community.  
The most difficult part has been finding time for students to do the visits.  Students have met Bible study groups at 6:30 in the morning, missed classes during the day to observe at the lower school, and pursued anarchists’ itinerant meetings around the cities on Tuesday evenings.  Colleagues have been mostly flexible as students missed classes, but some have been frustrated by late notice or extra accommodations, the challenge of anything that doesn't fit into an eight period school day.

At times, trying to create or keep momentum on a long term project has been a challenge.  We're still reading novels and writing papers. While we work on project proposals and questions, the reading sometimes feels distant.  So today's experience with the 1st and 2nd graders reminded me why we do the extra work creating project based learning. 

At the lower school that morning, I set up the camera and tripod, Lily went to get some students to interview as a follow up to the observation her group had done last week.  The three girls sat down on the couch, two blonde twins and a little girl with glasses and missing front teeth.  Lily told them her name and asked them theirs.  The twins answered first, then the middle girl exclaimed, "My name is Elizabeth, but I go by Lily, too!"  Big Lily started asking questions, and soon after the other Lily asked, "Are you Chinese, too?"  Hearing that she was, the girl blurted, "And I don't even speak Chinese!"  All three girls talked about their reading with remarkable insight for seven year olds, describing the books they liked, and the pleasures of different kinds of stories. At times they giggled and leaned into each other, and took polite turns answering  questions.  In a brief pause, apropos of nothing, little Lily stage whispered to big Lily, "I'm adopted" continuing her revelations, pursuing a connection to this young woman, this powerful image of herself in some distant future.

After we finished the interviews, my student Lily and I discussed the power of looking back in time, of nostalgia, certainly, but also of reflection.  I was struck by the power of experience, unlike a reading or a lecture or a discussion, to prompt us to consider our histories, our lives more deeply.  She asked if she could return and volunteer with that class second semester, and I noted it was certainly possible.   But mostly I was reflecting on this experience of messy, complex assignments rooted in community that taught much more than I could ever have intended.   


"A thing there was that mattered"



“A thing there was that mattered,” Woolf writes at the end of Mrs. Dalloway, that infuriating beautiful book, “a thing, wreathed about with chatter, defaced, obscured in her own life, let drop every day in corruption, lies, chatter” (Woolf 184).  My juniors and seniors gather at 8:30 in the morning bleary with fatigue and buzzing with outrage over some Facebook post that fuels some interclass conflicts among the seniors.  Online now being the natural place where things that might be best held back sneak out onto one screen and then instantaneously onto everyone’s screens. 

Amidst the chatter of a hopelessly chaotic last day of the quarter when a group of boys has supposedly created a ‘boys club’ in the lockeroom  (did somebody say defaced by obscuring chatter?) when the bells howl every 45 minutes and semester exams line up on the horizon of next week, my class gathers around two pages of this difficult novel to consider a thing that matters.  

“Can I ask a question not about this book?” she asks.  “I’m wondering why we read books.”  She asks this not accusingly but knowingly, aware that she herself and the class are on this cusp of an answer, an answer that she says she has been looking for since her 9th grade teacher talked about symbolism in a story. 
And I follow the question, wondering if these words creating a privileged, somewhat unlikeable 50 year old woman throwing a party, words written by a privileged woman who herself committed suicide, words looking into the void of their parallel real and fictional lives, words evoking the emptiness of England’s passing moment of greatness, suddenly visible at the end of World War I, a moment much later howled out by Sid Vicious punked up and coked out foully screaming, “There is no future in England’s dreaming.  No future, no future, no future for you”, can help this class understand why we read novels.    

And the 13 privileged students (certainly privileged to be so few, to be skilled enough to read Woolf) around this table who have struggled with Woolf’s density and with my academic demands and with what can only feel like the expectations of everyone looking at them while they reach out for the golden ticket of college admission; they read these words aloud and listen to each other and open themselves to the possibility that these words just might be able reveal something to them.  They are miraculously open, which is perhaps all we can ever hope to be.  

Immediately, they try to answer the question themselves rather than looking to me.  One compares it to the moment writing a lab report when you suddenly understand what it was you were trying to do.  Another asks if it’s like a movie, “are movies the new books?” and each pauses amidst the chatter to look for that thing that matters to him or her and say it aloud for the others.  I sit amazed at the baldness of this moment, the way our own truths suddenly rise up out of the commutes and the backpacks and simmering resentments and the unstated, background of sadness for one of their classmates, and we grope together for meaning.  I ask them to observe this moment of their own search reading about Clarissa Dalloway’s epiphany.  We seem to have our own rare moment of truth on the last day of the term, and then the bell rings and we all return to the chatter of our daily lives.