AND FURTHERMORE: A primer on the physics of school time
Published 5:00 pm Tuesday, September 4, 2012
- <p>Jon Rombach</p>
In line at the grocery store the other day, I was next to a dad and his daughter. She was maybe 12 years old and the checkout person smiled at her and asked, Ready for school to start?
There was a pause. A brief moment where you could see the girl check her first impulse and sift out the options on how she might answer. Her hesitation right there is the best example Ive seen of what it is to be civilized. Because the genuine response from any kid asked by a smiling adult if theyre ready for summer to be over should be to immediately attack the adult taunting them. Just a wild shin-kicking, scratching assault to get across the message that, no, Im not ready for school to start and heres what you get for reminding me.
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Instead, this well-mannered young girl thought it over. Her eye twitched a little. Then she forced a smile and said quietly, I guess. The checkout person smiled. The dad smiled. Even I smiled. Im not sure what we were smiling about. What child is ever ready for summer to end? What kind of question is this? We dont smile and ask prisoners who were just denied parole if theyre ready to go back in the slammer. Well, maybe we do. Ive never served on a parole board so I could be wrong about that.
I think its a cruel practice to be asking students, and teachers for that matter, if theyre ready to go sit in that classroom for another whole year. But now that I think about it, we should rub it in more often. It makes a nice incentive for these kids to work toward graduation. Im all for education, dont get me wrong. School taught me to cherish the knowledge that Ill never have to go to school again. And now I get to torment people who do have to sit in a classroom. Thats the real power of a diploma.
Kids, lets get you started on your exciting new season of learning with a quick science lesson. You may be wondering, as I did when I was your age, what makes the hands of a clock in a classroom not move. Simple. But first, you have to understand the phenomenon of summertime moving faster than other times of the year. Lets begin.
More sunbeams in the summer come through windows and land on calendars, which heats the molecules on the pages and causes them to speed up. So the days move faster. Its pretty basic science. And because Ma Nature balances her checkbook, theres an equal and opposite reaction through something called thermo-time dynamics which reduces the viscosity on the throwout bearings inside clocks during the colder months. This gets pretty technical, but just know that the basic forces at work here are beyond your control and its best if you try not to look at the clock. Another basic law of the universe is the Observer Effect, where the act of observation alters the thing youre investigating. So basically, when you look at the clock in the classroom you stop time.
See, learning is fun. And after you grow up to be big and smart like all of us grownups asking if youre ready to go back to school, you can apply these lessons to any field you want. Like brain research. You could do your doctoral thesis on the response of children who are asked if theyre ready for school to start. Measure how many pounds of resistance it takes for the child to not say what theyre really thinking, then divide that by how glad you are that summer is over, because now youre all grown up and cant wait for your own kids to be back in school.
So enjoy your time in the classroom. It isnt so bad. Youve got, uh… the holidays coming up. And theres recess. Crayons. See, theres lots of stuff to like about school. So learn a bunch and be nice to your teachers. And Ill let you in on a secret after you graduate and start working, youll find that office clocks dont move any faster. If you dont believe me just ask your teachers.
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Jon Rombach, a local columnist for the Chieftain, has a tattoo of a Number 2 pencil above his heart as a fond reminder of his school days.