What School teachers influenced you the most.

Radrook

Senior Member
Location
USA
Mine was this sixth-grade female English teacher who assigned us to write a short fiction story and who made a big deal about mine. Well, at first she thought that I had plagiarized it. After all, just a five years before I hadn't known how-to speak English. But when she finally realized that I wasn't lying, she had me go from classroom to classroom as the teachers read the story to the kids. The kids all reacted to the drama and finally applauded as the story ended. Something I had never imagined would happen.
 

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I did a cut/paste of stuffI wrote about school

Rather lengthy
Good read for those with sleep apnea;

SCHOOL

Year One


We didn’t have kindergarten. Hell, we didn’t even have all eight grades in that one room school tucked deep in the Chapman hills.
And we didn’t have a bus, or lunchroom, or gym, or indoor plumbing.
What we did have was Mr McDunn.

Looking back, he was the best grade school teacher I’d ever have.
Field trips were field trips, thru the woods behind the schoolhouse, down to the creek, building mud dams, and making wood sail boats, or we’d head up stream to the beaver dam, and when the steelhead were runnin’, before I even knew of a sea run rainbow fish that would grow to enormous proportion, he’d stand straddle legged in the stream and bail out those monsters with his hands.
Then we’d watch him cut one open, displaying the biggest fish eggs I’d ever seen.

One time, when it was snowin’ like a banshee, we took an old mop wringer and made igloos.
Yeah, we went every day, snow, ice, whatever.
And yeah, no bus, so kids appeared at school early, and while we were waiting for teacher to arrive (from his attached living quarters) we played with these little plastic red bricks that would snap onto each other….they fascinated me. We made planes, and built forts, and skyscrapers. It was like goin’ to the beach, I could never get enough.

But school, it was workbooks, my own pencil, my own desk.
Desks were the old wooden ones you see in old movies, the kind that hook up in a row, had the ink well, and groove to put your very own pencil, and you had a place underneath, housed in black wrought iron, to put your work books, and the seat flipped up, and so did the person’s in front of you.
That person was Francis Keller.
She was a tad messy, as her workbook place was eternally jammed with wadded up papers, and leaky pens, and broken things.
And Francis herself was a bit unkempt. But she did have a fetching look about her, and she was tough as nails.
She could beat the crap outta most kids there even though she was only in third grade.
One rather disenchanting thing I recall about her was her habit of snorting whatever was in her throat and nose and swallowing.
First I’d ever heard such a noise. Kinda like a reverse gargle…..and she ate paste.
Thinking about it years later, those unseemly habits may very well have become attributes………

One time during recess, nature called, and I headed to the outhouse.
It was a three holer, and it had a trough.
I grabbed the middle hole so I could peek thru the crack in the door for female invaders.
But Francis got the jump on me.
There she was. But she wasn’t there for business.
Next thing I know she’s flippin’ her dress up and her underwear down. Standin’ there starin’ at me.
Whoa, I immediately had a flash back of me and Connie in grampa’s tool shed, and made the brilliant deduction that Connie was not deformed, as most or all girls were missing some very vital things.
Then I took care of my back side and jumped off my perch to button up and head the hell outta there, but not quick enough to skirt Mr McDunn’s shadow.
So there we all were, Mr McDunn in his aura of teacher/god like omnipotence, Francis of who magically had put herself back in the altogether, lookin’ at me like I was satan, and me, standin’ there with my bib overalls huggin’ my ankles.
I learned a couple things that day.
1) Wimin are way ahead of any mind game you may ever venture to get conned into playing.
2) It’s because they are not distracted by all the apparatus us guys have.

So, yeah, we didn’t have all the facilities of the schools in town, but my first classes in psych and anatomy were right there in the three holer.

Over all, I learned more about social life that first year, than all the other seven grades put together.

And now, every time I go fishin’, wading a small stream, and catch the faint scent of roiled mud and creek water wafting thru my nostrils, my mind flashes back to those first golden autumn days of school.

“Live in the sunshine, swim the sea, drink the wild air.” Emerson
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Gary O'

Well-known member​

School, The following years

The local craftsmen had united and built us a real school.
Closer to town.
Two rooms.
Indoor plumbing, one for boys and one for girls.
Newer desks.
Swings.
…and a huge field.
Mr McDunn took us out to the field to explore.
Now I’d been runnin’ thru fields all my life, so I was a tad unimpressed….until he had us kneel down and move slowly thru the weeds and thistles, identifying everything that grew or crawled.
It got so I couldn’t wait for the next discoveries.

OK, we were all a bit rowdy, but he had a presence about him that got your attention. It sorta made the teachers that followed pale in comparison….and we took advantage.
Seems every one after him ended up having some sorta nervous breakdown right in the middle of the year.

Not sure what happened to Mr McDunn, but I got drift that our folks were not impressed with his philosophy, cause he was quite direct and they were a bit protective of their little darlings.





TheYear of Taboli

Mr Taboli arrived my third year, straight from the Philippines….or as he said, the ‘pillippeens’.
He wore a suit.
Reminded me of Desi Arnaz, hair all slicked into a pompadour with half a can of pomade.

And that accent. He didn’t have a chance.
‘OK turd grade, turn to page turdy eight.’
We slowly sacrificed that poor soul.

An event that I recall was pretty much the end of Mr Taboli.

Francis had a little brother, Dicky. Remember, this was in the ‘50s. The term ‘dick’ had yet to have a negative connotation. Fun with dick and Jane was just that.
We called him ‘Dicky’.
The kid was just one happy little guy.
Always grinnin’ that huge grin, buck teeth spaced wide apart, gigantic mouth….but had some intellect issues.
However, happy…just glad to be included in anything we did.
Unfortunately what we did was mostly to his detriment.
Andy had this oversized gravenstein apple.
‘Hey Dicky, I bet you can’t put this whole apple in your mouth.’
Turns out he could.
It’s just that he couldn’t get it back out.
So, we’re all laughin’ our asses off, and Dicky is laughin’ and droolin’ and chokin’ some, when Mr Taboli blows the recess whistle.
We all file back inside to our desks.
Dicky’s sittin’ there with his gigantic mouth stretched to the max, buck teeth clamped on that apple, just starin’ down at page turdy eight, droolin’ all over his workbook.
We’re all lookin’ straight ahead.
Then Dicky begins to get a little red and choke.
I gotta say, he held it together pretty good, not bein’ able to swallow and all, but once he commenced gagging, it was pretty much all over.
Remarkably, Mr Taboli was pretty good with a knife. He leaped over Bart’s oversized legs hangin’ in the aisle, and proceeded to perform an applectomy right there in class.
So, he was a hero…….for a few minutes.

It was only a matter of weeks that his rosy outlook of teaching the children of the trees would take a turn.
The event that became the clincher to his destiny was our zip guns. Little simply made ‘guns’ from clothes pins, springs and pebbles.
Just enough zip to cause a welt.
A well placed shot destined for a girl’s hind end…unless it was Francis….she’d take it from you and feed it to our own hind end.
Well, after all the lunchtime screaming and running, Mr Taboli rounded us up and just sat at his desk for several minutes.
Then calmly gathered up our zipguns and placed them on the floor in a little pile and commenced to jump up and down on them, screaming something in a language other than English.
Then he strolled over to his desk, sat down, put his head down, and started beating the surface of it with both fists.
Fascinating.
We didn’t have school for a couple days after that.
The Wadsworth years would follow.



I bumped in to Dicky a decade or so later.
‘It’s Richard now’

The poor chap had been working in the woods.
If you are short on brains, the woods are not the place to work. It’s bad enough if yer quick and sharp.
Seems Dicky had run a chain saw up his hand, right between his fingers, up to his wrist.
They didn’t do much for him in the patchwork dept.
At first, seein’ him at a distance, I’d thought, geez, Dicky is a Trekie,showin’ me his Vulcan wave.

Wonder how they're all doin' now..............






The Wadsworth Years

Mrs Wadsworth was our teacher for a couple years…..actually 2 ½ years, as she stepped in when Mr Taboli made his infamous exit.
The white coats didn’t come to get him, but after the zip gun affair we never saw Mr Taboli again…our first conquest.

Mrs Wadsworth was different.
She was old, and done with it all, but folks gathered around her and conned her out of retirement.
Turns out she’d run a concentration camp of grades six thru eight back in Milton-Freewater for centuries.
Quite the disciplinarian, as she could still wield a bamboo rod with the deftness of a samurai.
And those high top orthopedic oxfords that housed her rheumatoid ankles were nothin’ to mess with either.
She stood about five six, and weighed in at oh say 97 lbs, but still had a presence about her.
I got her to smile a couple times, but usually she wore this sour look, like she just got fed some horse shit, of which we tried.
She had what was sometimes referred to as denture face, some real jowls, kinda looked like Deputy Dawg’s gramma….and she used it to her advantage, lookin’ down on you thru her bifocals.
Eddy P, the terror of turd grade, was putty in her gnarly hands, and even his little brother, satan of second grade, was no match.

So things were as quiet as they could be in those two years.

We all respected her, and I even admired her, and I’d like to think she got a charge outa me, as she would single me out as an example for others not to follow.
When she gave me her special attention, I’d notice her neck would commence to sorta blossom into a rather deep crimson beginning at the start of her collar and creeping up to her chin.
This aurora was gradual, and mesmerizing.

Grammar was her specialty, and diagramming sentences on the black board was what we all did, over and over…past participles and me became friends, as we both found our little special place in the parse tree of life.

But the second room in that school held my fond attention.
Miss Dickerson taught kindergarten thru second grade.
She had a dimpled smile that would melt me into deep daydreams of her and I.
I’d sit thru history class, fanaticizing about us goin’ campin’. Her lookin’ on with admiration of me building a camp fire with nothin’ but my woodsman’s prowess, and then skinny dippin’ and then, well things got sorta grey from there, so I’d be stuck on replay, filling in more details with each re-run of my boyish manliness and her absolute womanliness, then fog, then back to camping, swimming, fog….sometimes we’d just lay on the bank after skinny dippin’ all naked, basking in the sun, fixated on each other’s *******s…but there was always that darn fog…….



The Mrs Nelson half year….aka The Half Nelson

She tried to be nice.
‘You can attract more bees with honey than with vinegar.’
Killer bees

The white coats did come for her
 

I suppose they all contributed something.🤔

There are two or three teachers from junior high school that stressed the importance of thinking for ourselves, remaining a bit skeptical, etc…

“When I think back on all the crap I learned in high school
It's a wonder I can think at all
And though my lack of education hasn't hurt me none
I can read the writing on the wall…” 😉

- Paul Simon
 
Needed to fill in my schedule in high school, so took a Drafting class.
The teacher was obsessed with details and precision.
He showed us a film where there were 50 or more people huddled over drafting boards,
designing parts for aircraft. All in white shirts with slide rules at their side.
I thought, 'I could do that'.

Never came to be, but it helped me see things in an orderly pattern.

His approach made such an impression on me, I took a second class the following year.
 
Mrs. Gray, tiny middle-aged Southern lady (quite the novelty in the Frozen Midwest) who had an iron fist in a velvet glove.

She was the most caring teacher on earth but she didn't take sh!t from anyone.

If I hadn't had her in 5th grade, I think I would have been "done with" for school after the hell-hole of 4th grade with the Teacher from Hell.

God love Mrs. Gray.
 
My 3rd grade teacher taught me to hate school. Among other issues, she had a small room off of our main classroom. It was a storage room. She would take anyone that she was mad at for talking or whatever and have them put their hands out, palm down. She would then take a wooden ruler and give the top of your hand a few hard slaps. It hurt and left only red marks, no bruises...

I and others disliked her so much that after we had moved on to higher grades, we would watch for her driving in her car, and blast her with eggs, soft peaches, or whatever we had access to. We did not damage the car but messed up the car...we never got caught by her as we were careful to hide who we were. This was a small town, so if she was driving around, we had time to find something to hit her with because we knew where she lived, so we would just wait for her to come home. Plus, I think she had lots of kids in our town hunting for her also...Eventually, she left our town, good riddance I say!
 
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I really don't know, other than one specific incident.

When I was a young kid, maybe 10 years old, I could not swim. The school had us go to the baths once a week, but I'd always struggle. They carefully tried to teach me, but it wasn't happening.

Enter, Ms Marchant. She was a bit of a witch, to be honest. Strict, mean, and not to be messed with. She was taking my session in the pool. She came over to me and said something along the lines of, "what are you doing, stop being a coward, GET IN THE POOL!" Now, I was sufficiently afraid of her - meaning I was scared witless - that I did jump into the pool. And with her barking at me, "kick those legs!, use your arms!" she actually got me to swim. I was scared into it.

After that I fell in love with swimming, and even ended up swimming a little in competition. I've always appreciated her for that.
 
Coach Sartwell. My coach in sophomore Junior Varsity baseball. He asked me what I thought my training should be. What would make me a better player. He changed my whole outlook on the game. He always involved me in the decisions, and they ere important for the team. I started seeing the team as the most important thing. How we all contributed all the time. :)
 
Mrs. Gray, tiny middle-aged Southern lady (quite the novelty in the Frozen Midwest) who had an iron fist in a velvet glove.

She was the most caring teacher on earth but she didn't take sh!t from anyone.

If I hadn't had her in 5th grade, I think I would have been "done with" for school after the hell-hole of 4th grade with the Teacher from Hell.

God love Mrs. Gray.
What was the teacher from hell doing to you kids?
 
When I was in high school, we had a math teacher who was well past normal retirement age.. She was so good that the district allowed her to teach as long as she wanted. In my senior year, I had completed all the "normal" math classes....algebra. trigonometry, and calculus. So I was able to join 15 other students who went to her class. She would go the the University in the afternoon, then come back the next day to teach us a "theoretical" math called "Coordinated Algebra/Trig". It sure made us think, and going to her class was a real privilege.
 
Auto shop teacher. Adolph something. But then... cars have always been my thing.
Now, my Spanish teacher had really nice legs. Funny... I don't know any Spanish.
Math teacher and I never got along. Failed me in 9th grade, then failed me in summer school. Then failed me in 10th and 11th grade and of course... summer school. Come senior year, I had to have at least 9th grade math to graduate. Pretty sure she passed me out of sympathy... that or she was afraid I'd be back next year to torment her.
 
I had an American ''English'' teacher.. she was from one of the Carolinas , I can't remember which one... if anyone influenced me , she did. She showed interest in my work where barely any other teacher did, and she was the only teacher who didn't use capital punishment at the drop of a hat..
 
Auto shop teacher. Adolph something. But then... cars have always been my thing.
Now, my Spanish teacher had really nice legs. Funny... I don't know any Spanish.
Math teacher and I never got along. Failed me in 9th grade, then failed me in summer school. Then failed me in 10th and 11th grade and of course... summer school. Come senior year, I had to have at least 9th grade math to graduate. Pretty sure she passed me out of sympathy... that or she was afraid I'd be back next year to torment her.
That reminds me of this tall, wiry, high-strung substitute math teacher who was writing out this extremely long equation as if he were a computer. He would only pause briefly in order to triumphantly punctuate the procedure with: "Therefore!" And then would resume the staccato writing with incredible velocity once more. He had lost me on the second Therefore! and I was I wondering when it was going to stop, when suddenly, instead of triumphantly announcing "Therefore." he stopped dead in his tracks and said.

"Wait a minute! This isn't right!" with his back to us and facing the blackboard, he began desperately backtracking through the labyrinth of numbers he had confidently assembled, but just couldn't figure out how the heck he had gotten to that point

Meanwhile, I noticed the student sitting in front of me was quavering with barely suppressed laughter. The more the teacher struggled to unravel the mess, the more he quavered until his desk was shaking as well.. Well, finally, the teacher gave up, turned around to face us, and noticed.

"How dare you laugh at me in my classroom! This is not my subject matter. I am only filling in for someone else!" he said.

But the student continued as if helplessly overwhelmed by some preternatural irresistible urge to guffaw.

"Get out of my classroom! Get out of my classroom right now!" the teacher shouted, while pointing an index finger towards the exit door. Finally, the student got up still silently shaking with laughter and left.
 
I liked our horticulture teacher and a history teacher who had traveled a lot. He was interesting because he had real experience stories to tell, and he was very nice.

Other than that, school was hell.
 
I liked our horticulture teacher and a history teacher who had traveled a lot. He was interesting because he had real experience stories to tell, and he was very nice.

Other than that, school was hell.
Our Horticulture teacher was a pervert. One time he held my brothers friend back after class, so my brother waited outside the classroom for him, and within a few minutes he heard some commotion and his friend screaming..( we were about 14 at the time ).. my brother tried to go into the class only to find the door locked from inside, so he kicked it in, to find the teacher manhandling his friend.. my brother picked up a big science stool and hit the teacher with it..
 
How exactly did they utilize bamboo cane to discipline?
Multiple hits across the legs and the backs of hands. One poor girl had the bone broken in the middle finger. Parents in those days kept quiet, I really don't know why. It goes to show that they got away with lots. I was a really good kid at school, maybe a bit too timid to stand up for myself. They didn't need an excuse to hit whether it would be for a spelling mistake or slow on the answers to a history and geography question. All I know I was mortally scared of them. If they didn't have your trust, how can you get their respect?
 
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When I was in high school, we had a math teacher who was well past normal retirement age.. She was so good that the district allowed her to teach as long as she wanted. In my senior year, I had completed all the "normal" math classes....algebra. trigonometry, and calculus. So I was able to join 15 other students who went to her class. She would go the the University in the afternoon, then come back the next day to teach us a "theoretical" math called "Coordinated Algebra/Trig". It sure made us think, and going to her class was a real privilege.
We had algebra, geometry, trigonometry, and then pre-calculus for the senior year. Math was the only subject I did well in. I don't remember any teachers standing out, though. I just liked it because it was like solving puzzles and it didn't require a lot of memorization. It was always in the back of my mind that one day I'd go to college and become an engineer. I thought it would be in mechanical engineering, but I went to college during the internet boom in the '90s, so instead, I got interested in computers and became a software engineer.

@Don M. , what did you wind up doing with all that math? None of my friends could understand why I liked math and they thought it was a waste of time. I wound up making a hell of a lot more money than they did! :ROFLMAO:
 


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