It seems that there are two kinds of teachers in bush Alaska. There are the "one-year wonders." They stay for a year and do great, but can't leave fast enough at the end of it. Then you have the "lifers." These are the people who come to Alaska right out of college and retire/leave when they die. I was neither.
Confession: I didn't really have any friends in Alaska. I had no support system in place. Despite the fact that I lived and worked with the same people, I didn't really connect with them. This made life very lonely. Any rational person would have left after a year or two, yet I stayed six years. Why?
The people I worked with were very different from me. Just about any time I spent with them was spent listening to their stories about sexual experiences/conquests, drinking, lamenting the fact that they couldn't legally drink in the village, which always led to reminiscing about things they did while drunk in Nome. I'm not like that, nor do I wish to be. It obviously wasn't about my co-workers, so again, why did I stay?
These are the reasons why:
- The kids were the cutest little Eskimos you ever did see.
- The community was wonderful. I wasn't accepted right away (that took five years), but I was welcomed by everyone.
- It was Alaska. The Norton Sound was (literally) my front yard.
- It was Alaska. The land was beautiful.
- Snow.
- I could take my kids cross-country skiing instead of going to the gym and no one thought twice about it.
- Field trips were amazing.
- The Iditarod. The learning implications of this event are almost endless. We were limited in what we could do with first graders, but with an older grade, or even partnered with an older grade, there are so many learning entry points:
- Math - distance, speed, etc.
- Science - dog physiology, micro-evolution, why racing poodles maybe isn't the best idea
- Geography
- History - Joe Redington, Sr. and his crazy idea for a sled dog race
- Writing - the possibilities are endless
- I appreciated spring like never before. When winter lasts until May, melting snow and the sound of running water in the morning never ceased to bring a smile to my face.
- We got creative to meet needs. This is where my passion for small districts comes from. I see now that we could have done so much more, but I never would have this perspective if not for that experience.