Story – 1

September 13, 2010

Classrooms are built to be places of learning, but no learning was taking place in room 5 at Government High School. That was Mr. Bond’s classroom, but the popular English teacher was nowhere in sight. Three weeks earlier he had been forced into the hospital by a compelling pain in his stomach that turned out to be a bad case of appendicitis. A string of substitutes had done their best to teach the students; but, lacking the entertaining qualities of Mr. Bond, they quickly lost the class’s attention. Given the context of the situation, even the most diligent students had soon turned into menacing mavericks. Mr. James, the vice-principal had been called to the classroom several times to restore order, but chaos would proliferate as soon as he returned to the main office.

News of the students’ crazy antics spread throughout the school district until the consensus among the substitute teachers was to avoid Mr. Bond’s classroom altogether. With no one willing to step into room 5, the vice principal felt compelled to teach the class himself.  Fortunately he was spared this difficulty when one intrepid retired teacher volunteered her services.

Mr. James studied her carefully as she stood in his office. Her back was curved from osteoporosis and a cloudy film coated her eyeballs, evidently the beginning traces of a cataract. “Are you sure you want to do this Mrs. Janaki?” questioned Mr. James.

“Oh yes Mr. James! Don’t worry about me. I’ve taught for sixty years and I’ve become assimilated to the ways of teenagers.”

Mr. James raised his eyebrow in doubt, and then laughed. “Very well Mrs. Janaki. They’re all yours. Room 5 is the last room on your right. Good luck!” As the vice principal watched her hobble down the hallway, he questioned whether or not she still had the vitality to survive a classroom full of teenagers.

What Mr. James did not know was that Mrs. Janaki was a very obstinate old lady who refused to give in to the ill effects of old age. Like the famous poet, Dylan Thomas, she refused to go softly into the night. After what seemed to be an eternity, she reached her classroom with only seconds to spare before the late bell rang. She opened the door and walked in with the students stepping in line behind her and taking their seats.

There was silence in the room as the students stared in disbelief at the frail figure standing before them. Mrs. Janaki’s ghostly eyes passed over each of them and finally settled upon the title of a book at the back of the room. Suddenly her face beamed with excitement as the students looked on with curiosity. “Oh! You’ve been reading The Great Gatsby! That’s a phat book! Gangsters and all!”

A gruff voice traveled from the back of the room. “You read it?”

“Read it? Why honey, I LIVED it!” With that Mrs. Janaki came to life, telling the students about the hurried life of the Roaring Twenties. “They called it The Lawless Decade,” Mrs. Janaki announced. Miraculously, learning had been restored to room 5 as the “experienced” teacher told the students stories of flappers, speakeasies, prohibition, the Harlem Renaissance, and so much more!

Dictionary meaning for the words (Marked)

Context
1. Discourse that surrounds a language unit and helps to determine its interpretation
2. The set of facts or circumstances that surround a situation or event

Diligent
1. Quietly and steadily continuing a task despite any difficulties
2. Characterized by care and preseverance in carrying out task

Maverick
1. Someone who exhibits great independence in thought and action
2. An unbranded range animal (especially a stray calf); belongs to the first person who puts a brand on it

Proliferate
1. Grow rapidly
2. Cause to grow or increase rapidly

Consensus
1. Agreement in the judgment or opinion reached by a group as a whole
2. Full agreement between a number of people

Compelling
1. Driving or forcing
2. Tending to persuade by forcefulness of argument

Compelled
1. Force somebody to do something
2. Necessitate or exact

Interpid
Vulnerable to fear or intimidation

Assimilate
1. Take up mentally
2. Become similar to one’s environment

Vitality
1. An energetic style
2. A healthy capacity for vigorous activity

Obstinate
1. Tenaciously unwilling or marked by tenacious unwillingness to yield
2. Stubbornly persistent in wrongdoing
3. Resistant to guidance or discipline; tending to do the opposite of what is normal or wanted

Disclaimer: All Information are taken from the internet. Author doesn’t have any copyright and not responsible for the contents published.