Tuesday 29 January 2013

"Resolution": Shauna's Results

As you may or may not know, the past several months of teaching in Ontario have been shadowed by some really crappy changes to our contracts and encouragement from our union to make a point to the government by giving up on all voluntary activities, among other things. It's taken its toll on the teachers at my school, particularly the team I work closest with, the Junior teachers. They're all awesome teachers who make amazing magic happen each day for their kids. Unfortunately, we're all super stressed with all the pressures on us right now. 

Thinking of all that, I was inspired to make several replicas of my Resolution project so that each one of my Junior colleagues could have one.

I was inspired by the gratitude jars that were popping up all over Pinterest right around the New Year (several of which I pinned), and by one of my favourite stories from the original Chicken Soup for the Soul. I know all this is ultra cheesy, but I figured it was time for some warm fuzzies. So, this is an apologetically cheesariffic craft.

One inspiring pin.
Another inspiring pin. You may have seen it on the Pinterest.
As a teacher and an overly sensitive person, I get some negative feedback that I take WAY too seriously. I let things completely overwhelm me. When a colleague, parent, administrator or student criticizes me or something I've done, I hang on to it, dwell on it, replay it in my mind and let it define me. That's really lame and I know it. I also get some really great feedback. I probably get WAY more of that, but I don't give it as much weight. In an effort to fight that, I wanted to create an "All the Good Things" jar for myself where I can put messages reminding myself of the good stuff. When someone says something nice, or I get a nice email, all I have to do is write it down and plunk it in my jar. Tah-dah, a jar of lovely, happy things to look at when I'm feeling down.

Who wouldn't want one of these?

At the end of every school year, I do an activity just like the teacher from the story I linked to earlier in this post. I have all the students pass around papers with their names on them and each student has to write something kind and juicy about each of their classmates. I then type it all up so it's totally anonymous and present it to them. That's their "All the Good Things". I usually make one for myself, because by then I need it, and I do a bunch for the other staff my kids know. These jars, I hope, will be more of an ongoing feedback kind of dealie. And more of a visual reminder that there are lots of good things going on.
 
Despite the fact that it looks like diapers are filling my cart, I am NOT pregnant. I visited the pet store before my Dollarama run and picked up some new bedding for my class pets (the adorable degus, Caine and Speedy). The packaging looks a lot like diaper packaging.
All my new jars getting packed up. Captain Handsome was a big help in finding these jars, as opposed to the teeny tiny mason jars that were available at this time.
The jars, ready to be decorated!
  
The lids had stickers covering them and I tried to soak off the stickiness. I even tried to use some kind of Goo-Gone type spray on them. It didn't work. Nor did scratching with newly manicured fingernails.
  
I was pretty perplexed at this point, and just about ready to stick the name stickers right on the lid over the horrible residue...
  
...when I discovered that peeling the letter stickers back OFF pulled off the horrible residue.
 
Nearly three hours later, I'd removed every smidge of sticker backing by using new stickers and a lot of smacky sounds disrupting everyone else's TV enjoyment.
The "All the Good Things" jars start to take shape!
Sparkly stickers...Lovely.

On each of the newly clean lids, I tried to neatly space the name of one of my colleagues, plus the year.
Thinking they were getting a bag of new treasures for the classroom, some of my students wanted to dig into the Dollarama bags I brought in. I told them I had a craft for some of the other teachers and they right away wanted to help.  

They added personalized messages for the teachers, (because they didn't want the jars to start out empty) and then introduced the ideas to the rest of their classmates, who added more messages and then delivered the jars for me, along with a note explaining them.
 
Overall, I'm pretty happy with the finished product. In the note, I signed it "a secret friend" and most of my colleagues never said anything to me. Either they hated the jars or they really didn't realize they were from me! As a class, we did get one wonderful thank you note from a teacher and my kids right away said, "Put it in the jar!", which gave us an idea to start a version of the jar for our class!

First Pinterest Challenge - success.

1 comment:

  1. Hey Shauna! Your email address that you gave me on my blog isn't working! email me at kristahickey3@gmail.com and we can chat about babies :)

    ReplyDelete