Saying ‘Thank You’ to All the Ms. Sandras

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Every school day just after 2 p.m., Sandra pushes her cart into my classroom to clean the bathroom and empty the trash cans. She is the school custodian and my students love her. When students hear her squeaky wheels in the hallway outside our door, they listen for her kind giggle as she enters the room. "Ms. Sandra! Ms. Sandra! Can I help you empty the trash? Can I help you?" they yell out with their hands waving in the air.

She responds, "Jennifer, you look so cute today! How you doin' VicTOR? Francisco, baby, you look like you're doing a good job for Mr. Barton. You come on over and help me today. Anna, honey, that's okay, you can help me tomorrow." She knows all of my students by name.

So I asked Sandra what I had been wondering for a while. “What do you like best about working at our school?" She put her hands on her hips and said, "It's the kids! I only take home about $20,000 a year, so it's not the money. I have to work second shift, so I don't like the hours. And people see me as just a janitor, so I don't like the way I'm treated sometimes. But I love the kids."

She does love our students. Last Friday, one of our second-graders was having a tough day. He hated teachers, he said.  At lunch when a teacher asked him to pick up trash he’d left at the table, he threw his tray onto the floor, stomped over to the corner and refused to budge. It was Sandra who helped put him back together again. "Now, you know you can't act that way. I know your momma,” she said in her precise, slow, southern drawl. “I'm gonna put her number in my cell phone and call her and tell her you're not actin' right." Soon, she had him cleaning up his tray and washing the table where his class had been sitting.

One day, I saw her give an extra milk to a student. "Sometimes, I buy my lunch and sit beside a child I know is hungry," she told me. "Then I can say, 'You can have some of this if you want it, or, ‘You can have some of that.' Children can't learn if they're hungry."

When she leaves my classroom, she walks across the hall. "Hello A," I hear her say. "Look at those new glasses on you. They make you look so handsome." She knows all of the names and stories of the students in that class, too.

"Mr. Barton," she said to me during a quiet moment after school, "I know 'bout these children because I come from where they come… Are you feelin' me? Sometimes, they need somebody to talk to them who understands them."

I see the way Sandra loves our students, the way she knows their names. How she talks to them and helps them.  I just want Sandra to know that someone noticed. I told her, “I'm glad you're at our school and I'm thankful for you."

Here’s to all the Sandras in our schools!

Barton teaches at an inner-city school in Greenville, S.C.

Comments

Ms. Sandra is awesome! More

Submitted by Jill Thomas on 29 December 2010 - 2:14pm.

Ms. Sandra is awesome! More importantly, this illustrates an idea I keep coming back to time and time again: young people need more adults in their lives. We never know which adult will have an impact on which student. Everyone who works in a school is a part of the solution.

Thank you Trevor Barton for

Submitted by Andrea Halbloom on 1 January 2011 - 9:37pm.

Thank you Trevor Barton for writing about the wonderful Ms. Sandra who deserves much more than she gets paid in money. I too have a Ms. Sandra that works as a janitor at West Marshall High School; her name is Connie. She spoils all of the the elementary and middle school kids that come to the high school after school to visit their parents that teach there. She always has an after school snack for them. She also is sometimes the only person around for some high school students who need someone to talk to. Once she spent time talking to a student that was suicidal. Jill is right, everyone who works in a school can be a positive role model and make a positive impact on students.

Thanks Jill and Andrea. Both

Submitted by Trevor Barton on 3 January 2011 - 1:44pm.

Thanks Jill and Andrea. Both of my grandmothers and my mom worked in elementary school cafeterias, so I know the importance of having caring people in all the positions within a school. As I was writing this piece, I was thinking about the old proverb, "It takes a village to raise a child." It really does take a school working alongside parents to raise a student - the whole school!

I was also thinking of ways to speak out for better pay for support staff in schools. Do you have any ideas about that?

Support staff (including

Submitted by Andrea Halbloom on 5 January 2011 - 10:13pm.

Support staff (including custodians) definitely deserve more pay for going above and beyond what is expected of them and actually caring about the well-being of students, but those that make a positive difference in the lives of children will never get paid what they deserve in money. Fortunately, money is not the reason that they decide to work in an educational setting; it is the great reward that they feel in their heart.

Trevor, This was a nice story

Submitted by Brittany on 4 January 2011 - 4:21pm.

Trevor,

This was a nice story to read. It is nice to hear about a person who is so caring and tolerant of the students. I think Ms. Sandra sounds like many teachers I know. She says she doesn't like the job for the money or hours but rather the kids. You can certainly tell she is a people person and I bet all of those students will remember her and how she treated them.

thanks!
Brittany

We had a Ms. Sandra at my

Submitted by Lynn on 4 January 2011 - 7:34pm.

We had a Ms. Sandra at my elementary school. Her name was Grandma June, and every kid in the school called her that. We only ever saw her in the cafeteria, so I'm not sure what her exact job title was, but she walked around and talked to the kids, sat with us sometimes, helped us clean our trays, and lined us up to go back to class. She hugged every kid who asked for a hug and lots of kids who didn't. She knew all of our names and most of our families, and as far as I know, she's still working in that cafeteria! She's had thousands of "grandchildren" over the years, and remembers all of them. I'm a second-year middle school teacher, and I think of her a lot when I do hall duty. I try to call all the kids by their names, and it's a lot harder than Grandma June made it look.

Thanks for your comments

Submitted by Trevor Barton on 5 January 2011 - 10:11am.

Thanks for your comments Brittany and Lynn. I heard once that 'care' is the bigger part of 'cure.' I think people like Ms. Sandra and Grandma June show us that if our schools are going to 'cure' the world then they have to be filled with people who 'care' - people who know your name, listen to your story, and give all that they are to help you become all that you can be!

It's amazing but true that

Submitted by Andrea Halbloom on 5 January 2011 - 10:00pm.

It's amazing but true that something so simple as saying hello to a student and saying his/her name does make a positive difference.