Another milestone! The Kindle Classroom Project has reached its 200th Kindle!

favicon After a record-breaking November, during which 40 Kindles arrived, thanks to generous donors, December has begun with a bang.

In the mail tonight was the Kindle Classroom Project‘s 200th Kindle.

IMG_20141202_172521

This Kindle Touch — the 200th in the collection — was donated by Xiaoshan Zuo (Fremont, CA). Thank you very much, Xiaoshan!

In lots of ways, this 200th Kindle is similar to many of the 199 before it. It was donated by a generous person who found the Project online and who wanted to make a difference in students’ reading lives.

But obviously, this is no ordinary Kindle. It’s a landmark Kindle!

When I founded the Kindle Classroom Project three years ago, I never thought that it would grow this much. Consider these numbers:

December 2012 — 14 Kindles
December 2013 — 87 Kindles
December 2014 — 200 Kindles

Here’s a nifty bar graph:

chart_1

Because of this growth, I have begun to have different thoughts about the Project’s future. Why not 300 Kindles by next August? How about every ninth grader in three schools gets a Kindle to keep for four years? What would be wrong if every student at a school gets a Kindle?

Because of the generosity of sustaining donors who have supported the Project from the beginning, and because of the new donors that find the KCP online every day, those questions are no longer crazy-sounding.

Thank you very much! favicon

TEACHER VOICES: Michele Godwin, #4

“Have I always been this ineffectual?”

Michele GodwinEd. note: Michele Godwin is beginning her 14th year of teaching high school. She’s back at Leadership High School, where she taught from 2001 to 2008. An English teacher by training and experience, Michele has changed her focus to build a library for Leadership. In addition to her fundraising and library organizing, she is an 11th grade adviser. These are her musings from the past few weeks, her fourth contribution to TEACHER VOICES. Please donate so Michele can buy more books!

favicon Tuesday, 11/4 – 11:50 am
More students requesting books. I’ve run out of money, but I can’t tell them no! Many of them are repeat customers, back to ask for a sequel or something new altogether. Some of them are brand new, though, quiet kids I’ve never met, kids who have heard about me or seen me in the classroom I share with Ms. M. For some of them, it is an effort to overcome their shyness to speak to me, to request a book. Occasionally, I look up from my computer to see a kid, usually a girl, hovering near my desk expectantly. It’s not until I speak first that she tells me what she’s looking for: “Do you have that book Bronxwood?” Sometimes, though, a kid will be much more expressive in his or her request. “HEY! YOU GOT THAT BOOK, MAKING OF A LATIN KING?” a boy yelled across the room to me recently, right in the middle of Ms. M.’s math lesson. No matter who asks or how, I say yes. Because reading!

Thursday, 11/14 – 5:30 pm
Today has been an especially horrid day. My advisory talks over me and doesn’t listen to anything I have to say. One girl is up all the time, asking to go to the bathroom and raising hell when I say no. I’m tired of asking kids to put their phones away, stop cursing, don’t use the N word, please sit down, did you read the directions? do you have your homework? do you even know what we’re doing? I’ve lost my patience with everyone, including my own child, who keeps asking me what’s wrong and “Can I do anything for you?” I spend the evening thinking about my 13 years of teaching, and wondering, Have I always been this ineffectual?

Friday, 11/15 – 8:30 am
I woke up feeling hung over, like I’d spent all night partying instead of weeping and beating myself up. I’m going to tell my principal that I’m done teaching advisory, that it’s too much, that I’m not serving these students and I need to stick with what I’m good at: putting books in kids’ hands. I’m tempted to call in sick and just not deal, but we have visitors on campus today and I don’t want to add to the stress. I go, but I’m good for nothing.

Friday, 11/15 – 12:45 pm
I tell my principal that I can’t do it anymore, that I need to go from 80 percent to 60 percent, forgoing my insurance and benefits to preserve my sanity. She is supportive and accommodating, and we agree that I will stop trying to teach my advisory, that I will just be a warm body in the room until next semester, when she can find someone else to take over. I feel too drained to be relieved.

Friday, 11/15 – 2:50 pm
I don’t speak to my students as they walk into Advisory. I stay in my seat, reading my book. The ones who can’t sit still wander around the room, bouncing off each other as usual. Others sit down and chat quietly with their table mates. Phones come out, but I don’t acknowledge them. A few kids join me in reading, and, overall, the room stays pretty relaxed. No one speaks to me, and I don’t speak to them. Thirty minutes later, it is time to go to the monthly all-school meeting. They don’t wait for me to release them; they just go.

Sunday, 11/17 – 8:45 pm
I’ve talked about it all day. Mark helps me by asking good questions; my partner helps by supporting me no matter what I decide; my 9-year-old helps by being sweet. I feel relieved but guilty, resigned but disappointed. What will I tell my students? Will they agree that I am not the person they need, that they deserve an adviser who can hold their attention and guide them to adulthood in a way that they can understand and appreciate? I’m going to bed.

Monday, 11/18 – 2:30 pm
Again, I do not speak to my students. I lower the lights and sit in the front of the room, reading my book. They are more subdued today, four long days away from the weekend. Eventually, they are all reading independently, no reminders necessary. Twenty minutes later, I turn the lights back on and stand up, not knowing what I’m going to say. I wing it.

“Advisory is going to be different from now on. It’s not working this way. I don’t know how it will be different, but it is going to change. I can’t fight with you anymore.”

A girl raises her hand — the girl who bounces around the most, who disappears every day to get water or yogurt or aspirin, who sometimes dances in the middle of the room, regardless of whether or not I’m speaking.

“Yes, M?”

“It feels like you’ve given up on us. I know we’ve been a handful, and some people have been disrespectful, but that’s not cool. It feels like you’ve given up on us, and don’t y’all always tell us that we learn the most when we’re doing something hard?”

Whoa.

I kinda laugh, noting that, for once, I have every single person’s attention.

I say, “Please direct any further questions to M., who is clearly the wisest person in the room.”

Some of them laugh. Some check their phones. Some wait for my answer, some start talking to their table mates. I repeat myself, “Things are going to be different. I’m not sure how, but things are going to be different.” Some hear me, others don’t. And that’s OK.

Monday, 11/18 – 8:15 pm
I will continue to be an adviser; I’ll tell my principal tomorrow. I’m embarrassed that I went to such a dark place of despair and frustration, and that I told my principal I was done. I know she’ll understand, though. She knows, better than I do, that this is the work, and, like our students, teachers have so, so much to learn. favicon

It’s a Kindle Thanksgiving

new kindlefavicon Happy Thanksgiving to everyone. I hope you had a great day!

Mine was filled with family, good food, and Kindles. This morning, Amazon got started on the holiday season by slashing its prices. The new touchscreen Kindle, usually $79, was cut to just $49.

So I shared the news on Facebook and Twitter, and less than 12 hours later, my Amazon Wishlist shows that NINE Kindles have been purchased.

Update: Now it’s 10!

Pretty great!

Amazon doesn’t let you know who has bought items from your Wishlist, so I’ll have to wait until Monday when I’m back in the office to find out who the extremely kind and generous folks are who contributed.

Right now, I know of just one of the donors: Wil (New Orleans, LA). Wil is a friend and former colleague who has given consistently to the Kindle Classroom Project. He has donated a Kindle and books in the past and has also been a monthly sustaining donor. Thank you, Wil, for your latest donation!

If you’d like to buy a new Kindle for a student (the $49 deal may last through the weekend), please do! Just go to my Amazon Wishlist. It’s easy! And it’s a great investment: For just $50, a ninth grader gets access to 500+ books for four years. (That’s sort of like buying a book a year.)

Thank you for making this a Kindle Thanksgiving!

Update: Just found out this morning that Lori (Woodbridge, VA) is one of the other generous Kindle donors. She was the one who got things started yesterday with the purchase of four new Kindles (along with chargers). Lori has also donated two Kindle and multiple books in the past. Sustaining contributors to the Kindle Classroom Project are awesome. Thanks, Lori!

Another update: The Kindle Thanksgiving continues with the donations of eight used Kindles. That means that 18 Kindles have been added to the KCP over the past three days. Thank you! favicon

This just in…

Go ahead, follow me on Twitter! Or contribute to the Kindle Classroom Project! favicon