When Students 'Cross the Line'
By Cindy
Reitzi
May 2003
Youre working on my last nerve.--
an almost spent teacher
In May, as the accumulation of hard-won wisdom and weary irritation coincide,
its important for teachers to know where their lines
are. Crossing the line and challenging authority are time-honored
sports among select teens that can intensify at different times of the
year. For me, my line is not usually about verbal challenges or even big
issues; its the repetitive, habitual things, like students who dont
bring pencils every day. I knew a student who brought his brush every
day but almost never a writing utensil.
These are the things that are like mosquito bites, irritating
at first, but then building to a point where you grind your teeth and
want to buy a can of Raid. So, how do you know when someone has crossed
your line? When it feels personal.
Sometimes this irksomeness can differ by gender. For
example, when girls choose to make trouble, they can have a knack for
reading just where your invisible line of patience is the line
between teacher annoyance and a phone call home. These girls know just
how to edge up or dip one manicured toe over that line. And if girls choose
to make big trouble (e.g. fights) they dont tend to respond to any
invisible hierarchy the school system or society have devised. For them,
its
personal.
Certain boys, on the other hand, stomp right across
the line in open line of fire. In that respect, they may be easier
to deal with because theyre more obvious. Many boys also have social
interactions that are fairly consistent and acknowledge hierarchies. (If
you can show youre top dog in a fair way theres
usually no more trouble). While both boys and girls want to know whos
in charge, some boys really need to know and hence, engage in teacher
baiting. This can be humorous verbal sparring or an authority challenge.
Either way, it often takes on a predictable pattern:
- Student incites challenge.
- Teacher responds.
- Third-party interloper responds (directed at inciting student).
- All parties go back to their corners.
I once had a very nice student (lets call him
Ruben) in my English class who was one of those does-nothing-but-otherwise-is-a-pleasure-to-have-in-class
students. One day, Ruben started to tease me. Apparently meaning this
as a compliment, he said:
Ms. Reitzi, you dont act like a teacher.
Thats OK, I retorted, you dont
act like a student.
Dude, she got YOU! said one boy. Whoa,
you asked for that one! said another.
Oh, man, sighed Ruben, retreating to his
desk, smiling.
These sorts of humorous volleys dont bother me.
We chuckle, and then settle in to the business of teaching and learning.
But when the challenge is to me as a Female Authority Figure, well, then
its
personal.
I was subbing an advanced math class, and the students
were working with lines and graphs. They were a younger, restless group
that wouldnt stop talking, and I ended up raising my voice to get
them to settle down. To make matters worse, a smarmy boy in the second
row smirked, You need a MAN to keep order in here, demonstrating
the boy-just-asking-to-know-whos-in-charge challenge.
Anyone who knows me knows that this was the WRONG thing
to say. Ive told friends this story and they looked at me like,
So, did you let him live? Now, Im not above using sarcasm,
but Im careful to contain it to about one line max. Most times thats
enough to make my point but not leave scars.
I was standing, he was sitting in a one-down position
at a 45-degree angle; I was positioned correctly. I eyed him like a lab
rat ready for dissection. I gave him my best clearly-you-dont-know-who-I-am
cocked eyebrow look, then said, crisply enunciating the ts:
Lit-tle boy
I do NOT need a man to keep
order in here.
He flushed to the roots of his blond hair and squeaked, Im
not a little boy in a little boy voice. At that point, the third-party
interloper kicked in. A male classmate in the back of the room loudly
announced, Hey, she called you a little boy! I like
this sub! exacerbating his embarrassment.
At this point I was on a precarious line as an authority
figure between making my point and becoming a verbal bully
with an already disarmed person. I wanted to issue a warning growl, not
to take off his leg. So I backed off. Immediately.
The student retained a blush pink, but was helpful for
the rest of the hour. I didnt mention it in the note to the math
teacher, but I knew that the next day if he asked, how did it go
with the sub? the poor student was going to have to relive his embarrassment,
with the wag in the back of the room reminding him. So I didnt rub
it in any further.
Lines are a complex abstract, not just in math. But
most people seem to understand what crossing the line means.
Its like lines in the middle of the road; you need to know where
the line is, so youre not driving on the wrong side.
Posted May 14, 2003