Dont understand the meaning of :growing sensation?!
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worst of us. In her eyes, we were a class of “bad kids,” though we had no guidance and no
structure and had been sentenced to a grim, underlit room in the basement of the school. Every hour there felt hellish and long. I sat miserably at my desk, in my puke-green chair—
puke green being the official color of the 1970s—learning nothing and waiting for the
midday lunch break, when I could go home and have a sandwich and complain to my
mom.When I got angry as a kid, I almost always funneled it through my mother. As I fumed
about my new teacher, she listened placidly, saying things like “Oh, dear” and “Oh, really?”
She never indulged my outrage, but she took my frustration seriously. If my mother were
somebody different, she might have done the polite thing and said, “Just go and do your
best.” But she knew the difference. She knew the difference between whining and actual
distress. Without telling me, she went over to the school and began a weeks-long process of
behind-the-scenes lobbying, which led to me and a couple of other high-performing kids
getting quietly pulled out of class, given a battery of tests, and about a week later reinstalled
permanently into a bright and orderly third-grade class upstairs, governed by a smiling, no-
nonsense teacher who knew her stuff.
It was a small but life-changing move. I didn’t stop to ask myself then what would
happen to all the kids who’d been left in the basement with the teacher who couldn’t teach. Now that I’m an adult, I realize that kids know at a very young age when they’re being
devalued, when adults aren’t invested enough to help them learn. Their anger over it can
manifest itself as unruliness. It’s hardly their fault. They aren’t “bad kids.” They’re just trying
to survive bad circumstances. At the time, though, I was just happy to have escaped. But I’d
learn many years later that my mother, who is by nature wry and quiet but generally also
the most forthright person in any room, made a point of seeking out the second-grade
teacher and telling her, as kindly as possible, that she had no business teaching and should be
working as a drugstore cashier instead.
s time went by, my mother started nudging me to go outside and engage with kids in
the neighborhood. She was hoping that I’d learn to glide socially the way my brother had. Craig, as I’ve mentioned, had a way of making hard things look easy. He was by then a
growing sensation on the basketball court, high-spirited and agile and quickly growing tal