Okay that’s it

I gave myself an hour this time, and got to 157. Then my brain exploded. 200 is, I think, utterly impossible without actively cheating or trying to memorize a list, and I’m pretty sure I still missed a handful of capitals. I did manage to get at least one in every state, though, plus DC and two in Puerto Rico. What’s the dumbest one I missed?

JuneauAK
AnchorageAK
WasillaAK
MontgomeryAL
BirminghamAL
TuscaloosaAL
Little RockAR
FayettevilleAR
PhoenixAZ
TempeAZ
SacramentoCA
Los AngelesCA
San FranciscoCA
OaklandCA
San DiegoCA
San JoseCA
FresnoCA
DenverCO
LittletonCO
Colorado SpringsCO
Hartford CT
New HavenCT
Washington DCDC
DoverDE
WilmingtonDE
TallahasseeFL
MiamiFL
TampaFL
AthensGA
AtlantaGA
HonoluluHI
OahuHI
Iowa CityIA
Des MoinsesIA
BoiseID
ChicagoIL
SpringfieldIL
BloomingtonIL
PeoriaIL
SchaumburgIL
PalatineIL
NappaneeIN
South BendIN
MishawakaIN
GoshenIN
GrangerIN
ElkhartIN
GaryIN
PortageIN
Fort WayneIN
West LafayetteIN
LafayetteIN
IndianapolisIN
BloomingtonIN
MexicoIN
BedfordIN
EvansvilleIN
Santa ClausIN
MuncieIN
RochesterIN
Kansas CityKS
LouisvilleKY
LexingtonKY
FrankfortKY
PaducahKY
Baton RougeLA
New OrleansLA
RustonLA
BostonMA
BaltimoreMD
AnnapolisMD
AugustaME
PortlandME
BangorME
PortageMI
NoviMI
DetroitMI
FlintMI
Traverse CityMI
Ann ArborMI
LansingMI
FarmingtonMI
NilesMI
Benton HarborMI
MinneapolisMN
St PaulMN
Kansas CityMO
SpringfieldMO
St LouisMO
BiloxiMS
HelenaMT
ButteMT
RaleighNC
DurhamNC
Winston-SalemNC
BismarckND
FargoND
LincolnNE
Dixville NotchNH
Hart’s LocationNH
PrincetonNJ
Jersey CityNJ
NewarkNJ
TrentonNJ
HobokenNJ
AlbuquerqueNM
RenoNV
Las VegasNV
BuffaloNY
New York CityNY
AlbanyNY
Rochester NY
CincinnatiOH
ColumbusOH
SanduskyOH
ToledoOH
Oklahoma CityOK
TulsaOK
BendOR
PortlandOR
PittsburghPA
PhiladelphiaPA
GettysburgPA
San JuanPR
MayaguezPR
ProvidenceRI
CharlestonSC
PierreSD
Sioux FallsSD
NashvilleTN
MemphisTN
AustinTX
San AntonioTX
GalvestonTX
HoustonTX
DallasTX
Fort WorthTX
El PasoTX
Salt Lake CityUT
MoabUT
QuanticoVA
RichmondVA
NorfolkVA
Virginia BeachVA
WilmingtonVA
LynchburgVA
RoanokeVA
CharlottesvilleVA
MontpelierVT
BurlingtonVT
OlympiaWA
TacomaWA
Green BayWI
MilwaukeeWI
CharlestonWV
CheyenneWY
JacksonWY

On being surprised

20130830-183623.jpgI had been thinking that the challenge this year was going to be the Algebra class. Two weeks in, I’m pretty sure I got that one completely wrong. Granted, we’re still mostly in “review” territory, but the Algebra kids are moving along swimmingly; if anything I could probably be pushing them faster if I really wanted to.

No, the problem is going to be third and fourth hour. First and second hour are just a roomful of kids. Granted, they swing toward the knuckleheady, and there’s more of them (32 or 33, I think) than I want there to be, and I’m sure there are going to be days where I hate them– but functionally they’re no different from any number of other classes of kids I’ve had over the years. They’re going to do well on some things and not so well on others. They’re going to be challenging, because teaching anyone anything is challenging, but they’re not going to be challenging, if you know what I mean.

On Tuesday, the school counselor walked into my room, shoved a roster under my nose, and told me to eliminate six of my kids.

“Permanently?” I said, eyeing a certain set of the roster.

“To (other teacher’s) room,” she said, and I started looking at a different set of kids. She then showed me a different list, which contained the six kids that she was moving into my room– special-needs students, each and every one of them. Turns out that it had been decided that I was going to co-teach with one of our special ed teachers during those class periods, and they’d decided to consolidate all the available special education students into my room out of the two seventh grade math classes that were available.

(Weird, true fact: There are two different kids who would have been on my list if I was consigning them to the flames, but were not on my “willing to send to someone else” list. I’m not sure what that says about me. Certainly not that I’m sparing the other teacher. The impulse is more “no one is your math teacher but me” than anything else, and I certainly insisted on protecting the kids who I had last year. I dunno.)

Teachers who read this will all recognize this anecdote: you know how sometimes you’ll get a writing assignment turned in from a kid, and it’s so bad that you literally don’t have any idea how to correct it? That the only thing to do is start over completely, and by “start over completely” I mean “wipe the kid’s brain, send him back to kindergarden, and reeducate him entirely”? Where there’s simply no way to correct the thing without entirely redoing it?

I’ve had that impulse in writing classes many, many times, unfortunately. I have never had it in math before, in twelve years of teaching, until this week– and this week I had it with four different kids. I have two students with sub-60 IQs, and another pair of boys who I don’t even want to talk about on account of their plethora of learning disabilities and neurological disorders. Plus at least four kids who are severely autistic (two of whom, just for the record, aren’t actually in this class) and two with massive behavioral disorders.

I’ve never co-taught before; I don’t know precisely how it works, and the special ed teacher, who has spent all week buried in beginning-of-year paperwork, has been content to sit back and let me drive the bus for now, although that will probably change as we get to know each other and find some time to actually collaborate. And I’ve never, ever had a class this low before. I’ve got two kids in there who were among my lowest students last year (although they both showed genuinely impressive gains over the course of the year) and this year they are the smart ones.

And now you know why there’s a Keanu pic at the top of this post.