A
Lesson To Remember
By
Tim Constable
In
September of 2005, on the first day of school, Martha Cothren,
a social studies school teacher at Robinson High School in Little Rock, did
something not to be forgotten.
On
the first day of school, with permission of the school superintendent, the
principal and the building supervisor, she took all of the desks out of the
classroom.
The
kids came into first period, they walked in, there were no desks.
They
obviously looked around and said, "Ms. Cothren,
where's are our desks?"
"You
can't have a desk until you tell me how you earn them."
They
thought, "Well, maybe it's our grades."
"No,"
she said.
"Maybe
it's our behavior."
And
she told them, "No, it's not even your behavior."
And
so they came and went in the first period, still no desks in the classroom.
Second period, same thing. Third period ...
By
early afternoon television news crews had gathered in Ms. Cothren's
class to find out about this crazy teacher who had taken all the desks out of
the classroom.
The
last period of the day, Martha Cothren gathered her
class. They were at this time sitting on the floor around the sides of the
room. "Throughout the day no one has really understood how you earn the
desks that sit in this classroom ordinarily." She said, "Now I'm
going to tell you."
Martha
Cothren went over to the door of her classroom and
opened it, and as she did 27 U.S. veterans, wearing their uniforms, walked into
that classroom, each one carrying a school desk.
They
placed those school desks in rows, and then they stood along the wall.
And
by the time they had finished placing the desks, those kids for perhaps the
first time in their lives understood how they earned those desks.
Martha
said, "You don't have to earn those desks. These guys did it for
you."
"They
put them out there for you, but it's up to you to sit here responsibly to
learn, to be good students and good citizens, because they paid a price for you
to have that desk, and don't you ever forget it."
"Freedom
is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to
our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed
on to them to do the same or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our
children what it was once like in the United States when we were free."
-- Ronald Reagan
Tim Constable www dot showcaseyourmusic dot com/TimC