To write middle grade fiction, it is critical to understand
the age group. However, that is tricky because children at this age are
changing very quickly in just about every developmental domain.
Consequently, they are contradictory in many ways, jumping back
and forth from extremes that would cause emotional whiplash in adults. Paradoxes
incarnate, young adolescents are capable of great kindness or cruelty. They can be apathetic
or driven, responsible or negligent—sometimes in the same incident.
I'll talk more about these paradoxes in future posts. But today, I want to recount an experience that presented
these paradoxes in high relief and taught me some important lessons about middle grade
students.
As a middle school choir director,
I’m on the front lines of adolescent developmental changes. Changing voices, extreme
self-consciousness, constantly shifting social dilemmas, apathy, the need to
appear cool—these are only a few of the challenges.
Every year, we work and try and do the best we can. But
often, as we perform, things fall apart. Someone starts laughing and touches of
a conflagration of giggles. Otherwise outgoing and voluble children suddenly
freeze up and compete to see who can produce the least volume. Voices crack or
get pitchy. On and on. It’s middle school and is to be expected.
But still, it stings a bit. We finish the song, and I turn
around and face the audience with a tight smile, acknowledging their polite applause,
wishing things had been different.
I really want to sound good. I long for a performance that
is truly beautiful, not merely “good for middle school.” I crave a song
that sounds so good that when I turn around to acknowledge the audience’s
applause, I can smile back, nod, and think, “Yeah, this one was really good.”
With that confession, let me tell a story. Last year, my 8th graders were very talented vocally—one
of the strongest groups of singers I’ve ever had. They were also flaky and
silly. Prone to chatting and goofing off, they fit the cliché of immature
adolescents.
Knowing their potential, I chose “White Christmas,” as one
of the songs for our winter concert. One of my all-time favorites, I have a
beautiful choral arrangement of this song and really wanted to see what we
could do.
As we practiced, their sheer talent impressed me. I began to
hope that this year, my students might sing the song I’ve yearned for all these
years. The song that would let me face the audience with a genuine smile. The
song that would be truly excellent.
We practiced with single-minded determination, spending entire
class periods trying to master a single phrase or singing a single chord correctly.
However, I soon realized I could practice over and over in
class, but until they took ownership and practiced on their own, we wouldn’t
make any lasting progress.
As the concert drew even closer, their attention wavered and
weakened. A week or two before the concert, we had an especially discouraging
rehearsal. At the end of class, I asked them to listen. They were hyper and
inattentive, anxious to get to lunch.
“Guys, I need to talk with you,” I said. “As soon as I’m
done, I’ll excuse you. But you’re not leaving until I’ve said what I want to
say.” That got them quiet. “I’ve taught you for three years. I’ve been patient
with your changing voices, social awkardness, hyperactivity, and your minimal
attention spans. I’ve tried to be patient, kind, and treat you with respect.
I’ve had generous policies in my classroom and have tried to make your lives a
little easier and better, at least in chorus.”
They knew what I was saying was true. Though far from perfect, I always have tried to realize how much power for good or bad a teacher can have on the daily lives of students.
“Every year, we practice and practice and then we get up and
you sing somewhere between ‘marginal’ and ‘painful’. And then, every year, I have
to turn around and face your parents, trying to smile and put the best face on
it.”
They seemed genuinely shocked to discover that they had not
been wonderful at all times.
“I know some of you really don’t care about chorus. Fine.
But this is my job. This is my life! And, just once, I would love to have a
group perform well—really well. Well enough that the applause is real, not polite.
Well enough that people say, ‘Wow! That was good!’ Maybe you don’t care, but I
do! So, I’m asking for a personal favor. I only want one thing for Christmas. I
want one song that is so genuinely good, I can turn around and smile back at
the audience for real. That’s what I want for Christmas. Just in case you
wondered. You are dismissed.”
Unrepentant and apathetic, they ran out to lunch. I sighed. Oh
well. Another year perhaps.
I didn’t see them much after that because exam week came and
the schedule of classes changed considerably.
The concert came and I faced it with stoic resignation.
We sang our first song, and it went pretty well. Better than usual. Our second
song went well, too. And then it was time for “White Christmas.”
The accompanist played the intro, and I brought the choir
in on the verse. To my surprise, their first notes were at exactly the dynamic level I had requested.
The boys and the altos divided out of the melody, splitting into an unresolved
chord on “palm trees sway,” then resolving into a beautiful, clear chord.
I realized that they were really trying. And then, as I
looked more closely at them, I realized something else. They were sincerely
trying to give me a gift. I could see it in their eyes. At that point, they all
got blurry as my eyes misted over.
As we finished the verse they executed a quick decrescendo,
beginning the familiar chorus with a warm, rich hush that gave me chills. It got better and better
as we went on. We hit the high point, “May your days be merry and bright.” We
sustained that note—a luscious, full chord—three different notes sung in perfect balance. I heard the descending notes from the boys, heard the altos go down a
minor second to resolve the chord, heard the clear, sustained note of the
sopranos. Together, they faded out slowly on, “And may all your Christmases be
white.” They even enunciated the final "t"sound while avoiding a long hiss on "Christmases."
It was so perfect. So heartbreakingly gorgeous. Flawless. I
was so caught up in the music that it took me a few seconds to realize that they
were looking up at me with hopeful expressions that clearly asked, “Did we do
it?”
I blinked tears away as I mouthed, “Thank you. Thank you.” They
broke out into enormous smiles.
There had been so many times in the past I hadn’t wanted to
turn around to face the audience. On that occasion, I didn’t want to turn
around, but it was because I didn’t want that moment to end. I wanted to savor
the genuine beauty of the song, and the even greater beauty of their sweet,
unabashed gift.
Those egocentric, inattentive, squirrelly students had transcended
all their adolescent goofiness, pushing themselves to do truly excellent work.
Somehow, they decided to give me the only gift I really wanted. More importantly,
they had pushed themselves to the fullness of their potential. They had cared,
tried—and succeeded in a magnificent way.
That’s the thing about middle school students. They are
extreme. They are contradictory and paradoxical. But sometimes, those extremes are absolutely
breathtaking. Middle school students can be simply magnificent.
Happy Holidays!
What a beautiful story, Braden!
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing such a lovely moment.
Thank you, Dawn!
ReplyDeleteBraden, this is great! You are so right too! :) Thanks for sharing this.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Hilary.
DeleteThis made me blurry eyed too. I love, love, love middle schoolers!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Caroline. They are strange and wonderful little creatures, aren't they? I love them too!
DeleteThat was a lovely, lovely story.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Matthew. I appreciate you stopping by today.
DeleteThanks for sharing that, Braden. With a short attention spans and a biology that wants to run around and sleep instead of sitting still for hours each day, the average middle school kid doesn't know what is happening or, for that matter, what is happening to anyone else. It is great that you got through and, hopefully, showed them that, with a little effort, they can be amazing.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Eden! The way we have designed modern life is so at odds with these poor kids, it's a wonder any of them make it. But they are incredible.
DeleteI got tears in my eyes too, Braden.Thanks you for sharing it.
ReplyDeleteFolks, I think it's time for a gorgeous middle school book about choirs!
Yes! That would be great.
DeleteBeautiful story thank you for sharing sounds like your nudge helped them meet their potential, lovely.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Brenda! It is funny what works. Funny and nearly always unexpected.
DeleteWhat a wonderful story. Thanks so much for sharing...
ReplyDeleteThank you, Kenda. I appreciate you stopping by.
DeleteGreat story! loved that they were looking at you to see if they had given you your gift! ( And, I remember how hard our music teacher worked last year to our school's choir ready for the winter concert!)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Paul. I think that was the moment I really lost it--and really realized just how much paradoxical they can be. It really mattered to them and that taught me a great deal.
DeleteI was at a holiday event this weekend and a MS choir and band were performing. It was so fun (and nostalgic!) to watch them milling about beforehand and up on stage for the performance. You're right - it's such an intense time but so endearing as well.
ReplyDeleteThere is definitely a certain kind of charm to these events. Thanks for stopping by, Marissa.
DeleteBraden, thank you. You so perfectly captured the magic of that age and the hopeful hearts those children have. Absolutely beautiful story. Wow. Just. Wow.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much, Joseph! I appreciate that very much.
DeleteSuch a touching story! Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Andrea! I appreciate you stopping by.
DeleteLove this story! I have an 8th grade daughter in a choir class, and I can only imagine the difficulties of trying to teach that age. Of course, according to her, it's the boys who are just impossible to deal with. The girls are angels. ;)
ReplyDeleteThat makes me, laugh, Dee. Those are stereotypes--and like all stereotypes, there is more than a little bit of truth there! :) Those wild boys are like pepper or spice in what is a lovely, but perhaps somewhat mild, dish.
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