Quantcast

Learn Me Good 2

Mister Teacher rants, raves, and comments about life as a 3rd grade math teacher

Sponsored Links

The lights are off, and nobody's home

This morning, the Dallas area had a major storm. When I got to the school at around 7 a.m. the power had gone out and there were no lights in the building. It's a pretty good thing I don't scare too easily, because otherwise I would have been freaking out being the first person to walk down the pitch black third-grade hallway.

Once I used my bat-like sonar and gained access to my classroom, I was able to pull up the shades and let a little bit of light into the room. Then I went back outside and did my usual morning crosswalk duty.

The power was still not back on by the time I picked up my kids, so we ate breakfast in darkness. The kids of course kept asking, "What happens if the lights don't come on on Wednesday?" Referring to Wednesday's TAKS test. I told them they'd have to take it in the dark. Evil, I know. Sorry.

At around 8:10, the power came back on in a very strange fashion. The lights out in the hallway came on, but when I flipped the switches in my classroom, those lights remained off. On a whim, I tried the pencil sharpener, and it worked just fine. I went and turned my computer on. Not sure why all of the electrical outlets worked while the overhead lights did not, but that was the case until around 8:30, when the lights finally came on.

An odd start to the week, and tomorrow is going to be even crazier. Tomorrow is Stupendous Tuesday or Fabulous Tuesday or some such, so there will be voters galore at my school. Stranger danger everywhere you look, and I have a feeling Anonymous Joe and high will have a very hard time keeping them from parking in the student drop-off zone.

Learn Me Good

Posted: Monday, March 03, 2008 6:15 PM by misterteacher

Comments

Betty said:

As long as the pencil sharpener works, all is well.  Just kidding.  I love your stories.  

# March 3, 2008 7:18 PM

misterteacher said:

Thanks Betty! :)

# March 3, 2008 7:22 PM

MysteryTeacher said:

They used to make us teach in the dark. Some of our older classrooms didn't even have windows at all. Even our water system ran on an electric pump.  No electricity, no water.  Finally a couple of years ago, the parents complained because the kids couldn't use the bathrooms.  They started cancelling school when the power went out and there was no relief in sight.  It has happened one time with kids here since.  We couldn't get in touch with about half our parents.  They had changed their numbers and didn't notify the school.  One parent changed it so the school couldn't call him anymore.  In those cases, the police went to the  homes to notify the parents.  This year, we have updated numbers on all our kids.

# March 6, 2008 2:02 PM
New Comments to this post are disabled.