Visual Notes from a Retiring Teacher – My FIRST “Joke Board”!

Answer: “Because he has so many fans!”

Note: I’ll be retiring in July 2026, after 40 years of teaching English as a foreign language to deaf and hard-of-hearing students.  (Actually, after 41 years, but my first year didn’t count…)

So, why exactly did it take me more than 40 years to have a weekly joke/pun bulletin board displayed in class?

The answer is actually quite simple.

Overthinking it.

(I have a strong urge to say “I over-thunk it” but I have no idea where that originated…)

I’ve always toyed with the idea. But it seemed daunting, as in my learning center for deaf and hard-of-hearing teens, I teach every possible level. So:

  • What level should the jokes be suitable for?
  • Do I need several joke boards for different levels?
  • Will the weak students be offended, and the advanced students bored?
  • How do I keep track of who has seen the joke and who hasn’t before replacing it with a new one? Remember, my students don’t come to me as “a class”, every student has their own individual schedule…
  • Should it be cartoons with captions instead of just words, to fit in with my emphasis on the visual aspect of everything?
  • Where will I find the jokes? Will I have enough?
Answer: ” Because atoms make up everything!”

AND AND AND AND…

The two factors that in the past always made me put aside the “joke board” idea:

It seemed to be too much work. As it is, I have to keep track of so much and prepare everything at different levels.

I’m not a funny person. People say all sorts of things about me, but being funny is not one of them. Not at all. I did not trust myself to choose suitable jokes for teens…

Answer: Because she has bad blood!

 

Then one day…

I  found myself staring at this joke I encountered on Facebook related to the singer Taylor Swift, thinking, ” Vampires, Taylor Swift, blood…maybe the students would like this?”

Retiring is about gradually letting go, right?

Let’s just try posting the joke and see what happens.

The joke board is leaning on the whiteboard, a bit to the side.

Not a single student noticed this new addition to the classroom decor, leaning on the whiteboard, despite its fairly prominent place!

So, on the following days, I pointed out the joke to students as they walked in, though sometimes I forgot to do so.

I didn’t track who had seen it or who hadn’t.

I let the stronger students explain the joke to the weaker students. Some only responded with their feelings about Taylor Swift, ignoring the joke, while others were amused.

The first week wasn’t very encouraging, but I keep posting the jokes /puns weekly. Now, several weeks later, some of the students check the board regularly; they comment on how good /bad the joke is, while others will only look if I physically lay the board on their desk first. Something I don’t always remember to do.

I had a brief moment of stress when I almost went down the rabbit hole of investing time in what to do with the “used” jokes I was taking off the board (thoughts such as “should I keep them in plastic coverings to be reused in the future and make a little booklet…” aargh), but I decided to just place the used jokes in a box.

I don’t have to plan for posterity anymore.

I’m retiring.

I’m just having fun laughing with the students or discussing the jokes with them!

Answer: A sick seven!

*** Some notes about this joke, currently hanging in my classroom:

Some students thought this joke was really clever. Two students criticized me for bringing this “thing from 2025 into 2026. We’re done with it”!

The two profoundly deaf students (most of the students function as hard-of-hearing students when they use their cochlear implants or hearing aids) didn’t get it. “sick” and “six”  are two visually distinct words for them…

Saturday’s Book: “The Correspondent” by Virginia Evans

Two…
Naomi Epstein’s Photos

For once, I’ll start with the bottom line – I REALLY ENJOYED READING THIS BOOK!

I couldn’t put it down…

I have a soft soft for books written as an exchange of letters. I love the way I gradually gather information about the characters and the plot begins to form and make itself clear. Each letter promises a fresh detail or meaning to uncover. This book has a main character, Sybil, who corresponds with many others. The different letters from varied people let you think about the events in question from different perspectives without being confusing.

I can relate to the fact that in the act of writing one has to consider and clarify thoughts and feelings. Sybil is in her mid seventies and we learn about her life both present and past.

A different conversation… Naomi Epstein’s Photos

“The Correspondent” caught my interest on page one. It is simply so well written that in my mind I have placed it on a virtual shelf beside my favorite books written in the format of letters, namely “84 Charing Cross Road” by Helene Hanff,  “The Color Purple” by Alice Walker and “Address Unknown” by Katherine Taylor.

Note: I just went back and read my post from 2020 about the book “Meet Me at the Museum” by Youngson. Not only should I have placed it besides the above mentioned books on my virtual bookshelf, the post reminded me that  I should be saying an  “epistolary novel” instead of “books witten in the format of letters”. But I never liked the sound of the word “epistolary”…

Tread carefully when you write…
Naomi Epstein’s Photos

The book comes with a  surprising “fringe benefit” – it’s full of book reccommendations! Not only do some of the characters reccommend books to each other,  but the protagonist Sybil writes to the authors who wrote books that moved her.  I’ve read a few of the books mentioned and made notes for myself to look for some of the others. The library had one of the books mentioned available immediatly, so I’m already entering a totally different world. More on that to come!

A warm reccommendation for “The Correspondent”!