School DaysSchool DaysSchool has had its many ups and downs through the years. From hitting a game winner in a basketball game to transferring to a new school. I would have never imagined myself being where I am today.
I dont remember much of my elementary school days. Actually, I dont remember anything until 2nd grade. I remember 2nd grade so clearly because that was the year I moved to Heber Springs, from Shirley. I was in Mrs Seatons class at Shirley, my parents were talking about moving. We hadnt fully decided yet. He was trying to get a job at First Assembly of God in Heber. Well, he got the job and we moved, about halfway through the year. The first day at the new school was coming up and I was nervous. It was a new school and I wasnt looking forward to it. Luckily, i didnt have to go the first day because I got sick. I was good to go the next day though. I got Mrs Ingram for my 2nd grade teacher at Heber. That class is where I met my best friend, Ethan Bly. He was my best friend up until 9th grade. The next couple of years flew by, I dont remember much from them.
1) Ethan’s mom: i had been dating her for 3 years. she’d gotten me to write a poem about me all of her years ago. i’m a big picture artist and i did all my own photoshop and photo book art on mom. her art was cool. all her school friends loved her drawings. i’d been getting into writing poetry and pictures and writing about the beautiful women who lived and were beautiful, but the art I had in my head was so much more. i didn’t really try to write poems or just be a little playful. I just wrote more about other people’s stories. i thought I would be able to talk to people and that was my goal then, to reach that kind of goal. i loved going to school in Heber. it has been a wonderful experience. 2) my grandparents: i was very poor but had a nice job and could afford to get on food stamps. i was a real foodie and lived off of my own cash and took care of the kids. i was very young and I had no idea my life would turn out for so short, i made a very positive impression on the boys in my class. they were very nice and gave me credit for a decent job. i also worked at First Assembly of God as a teacher in Heber. I was a very happy girl who loved people. i was always trying to do things my own way. when my dad came around around 6-8 years ago when I was 15 and i was about 20ish years old i was living paycheck to paycheck in a big apartment with a 3 bedroom apartment. she really loved me and she took on many things the class would never let me do. i love the feeling of helping other people. i love that her family didn’t want to see me dying alone. she was amazing and helped get me to some schools and a job. the last time i did those things i didn’t even notice that she was there. it scared me that I could get killed trying to help. it scared me and i was like an adult all over again. i can relate to every girl and teen who just want me to do my thing. if they can’t do their thing, the other girls won’t. i still look at that picture of her sometimes. 3) my brother: he played football with I don’t know how long until i told him i only read about sports when it came to my mom because i was a kid. he liked to sit on a chair, and listen to music and he was the one who would sit back and listen in silence until i got the next lecture or a note. i still hate hearing his thoughts, but i understand that he was trying to be a nice middle school person who just wanted to get up off his chair and sing something with people. 3) my mom: i got so old i didn’t remember my school last year. i remember the first day, the day that i moved back to Sheber and started hanging out with my best friend, Ethan. my mom was having a hard time getting her friends to come out of their seats. i
Bryn M. Miller is the parent of the 2nd year school class at Iber that was moved. She said they didnt know about this move or anything.
Bryn Miller has a young daughter. She attended Iber State University and was a junior. She was in class when a fellow student pushed her to the ground; she hit her head on the table before she got hurt.
Bryn Miller and her parents get an email that said a student should not be able to leave the classroom. She’s 5 and she has two brothers and a brother who died at the same time, so no one here can get to the next student. She could have at least brought her a bottle of water and her brother had to go around the house to get away. I got to the class but her mother came after and took her back to the house and said, “you can’t.”
This is not my first time dealing with this kind of conduct. It was a common behavior. You can see from the photograph below, this was done when I was 7 years old. The other students are 4 years old and all of the little girls (including myself) are now 4 or 5 yr-old. At least 15 yr-old boys have been reported for this kind of conduct at heber. I’m not aware of anyone in his family having this kind of behavior. There also were kids who were 15 years to 17 that were abused, not 12 to 14 until recently.
Bryn Miller says students should not be separated from students, and should not be punished or punished for their actions.
In the case of this student who was placed in class, she was moved to a different school.
I don’t even want to talk about this case, it is one thing to lose a parent. I am not going to put up with a kid just like this. We never met, but I remember that while living in the community, our family would stop by to check on new parents. I remember when they were not home or the house was empty; I think of it. At age 8, we talked and I was like, ‘Oh my God. Who is this girl sitting beside them?’ I’m so sick of her telling us that. I want them to tell us all about my friends, my teachers, all the people who live next door to our house. And they can tell anybody in there and tell us everything they know about me. I want them to see that it’s not normal to be like this, that you lose your parents, your best friend is at risk of a really bad case or a really awful case if your best friend is there. And I want them to be prepared so they can know what’s going on. And I want them to know that they’ll be able to deal with it. And they can always come back and tell us about anything they think is inappropriate. I want them to be able to deal with it. And my mom said, ‘Don’t worry, it’s okay.’ I love you
Bryn Miller in the photo above takes
Bryn M. Miller is the parent of the 2nd year school class at Iber that was moved. She said they didnt know about this move or anything.
Bryn Miller has a young daughter. She attended Iber State University and was a junior. She was in class when a fellow student pushed her to the ground; she hit her head on the table before she got hurt.
Bryn Miller and her parents get an email that said a student should not be able to leave the classroom. She’s 5 and she has two brothers and a brother who died at the same time, so no one here can get to the next student. She could have at least brought her a bottle of water and her brother had to go around the house to get away. I got to the class but her mother came after and took her back to the house and said, “you can’t.”
This is not my first time dealing with this kind of conduct. It was a common behavior. You can see from the photograph below, this was done when I was 7 years old. The other students are 4 years old and all of the little girls (including myself) are now 4 or 5 yr-old. At least 15 yr-old boys have been reported for this kind of conduct at heber. I’m not aware of anyone in his family having this kind of behavior. There also were kids who were 15 years to 17 that were abused, not 12 to 14 until recently.
Bryn Miller says students should not be separated from students, and should not be punished or punished for their actions.
In the case of this student who was placed in class, she was moved to a different school.
I don’t even want to talk about this case, it is one thing to lose a parent. I am not going to put up with a kid just like this. We never met, but I remember that while living in the community, our family would stop by to check on new parents. I remember when they were not home or the house was empty; I think of it. At age 8, we talked and I was like, ‘Oh my God. Who is this girl sitting beside them?’ I’m so sick of her telling us that. I want them to tell us all about my friends, my teachers, all the people who live next door to our house. And they can tell anybody in there and tell us everything they know about me. I want them to see that it’s not normal to be like this, that you lose your parents, your best friend is at risk of a really bad case or a really awful case if your best friend is there. And I want them to be prepared so they can know what’s going on. And I want them to know that they’ll be able to deal with it. And they can always come back and tell us about anything they think is inappropriate. I want them to be able to deal with it. And my mom said, ‘Don’t worry, it’s okay.’ I love you
Bryn Miller in the photo above takes
Bryn M. Miller is the parent of the 2nd year school class at Iber that was moved. She said they didnt know about this move or anything.
Bryn Miller has a young daughter. She attended Iber State University and was a junior. She was in class when a fellow student pushed her to the ground; she hit her head on the table before she got hurt.
Bryn Miller and her parents get an email that said a student should not be able to leave the classroom. She’s 5 and she has two brothers and a brother who died at the same time, so no one here can get to the next student. She could have at least brought her a bottle of water and her brother had to go around the house to get away. I got to the class but her mother came after and took her back to the house and said, “you can’t.”
This is not my first time dealing with this kind of conduct. It was a common behavior. You can see from the photograph below, this was done when I was 7 years old. The other students are 4 years old and all of the little girls (including myself) are now 4 or 5 yr-old. At least 15 yr-old boys have been reported for this kind of conduct at heber. I’m not aware of anyone in his family having this kind of behavior. There also were kids who were 15 years to 17 that were abused, not 12 to 14 until recently.
Bryn Miller says students should not be separated from students, and should not be punished or punished for their actions.
In the case of this student who was placed in class, she was moved to a different school.
I don’t even want to talk about this case, it is one thing to lose a parent. I am not going to put up with a kid just like this. We never met, but I remember that while living in the community, our family would stop by to check on new parents. I remember when they were not home or the house was empty; I think of it. At age 8, we talked and I was like, ‘Oh my God. Who is this girl sitting beside them?’ I’m so sick of her telling us that. I want them to tell us all about my friends, my teachers, all the people who live next door to our house. And they can tell anybody in there and tell us everything they know about me. I want them to see that it’s not normal to be like this, that you lose your parents, your best friend is at risk of a really bad case or a really awful case if your best friend is there. And I want them to be prepared so they can know what’s going on. And I want them to know that they’ll be able to deal with it. And they can always come back and tell us about anything they think is inappropriate. I want them to be able to deal with it. And my mom said, ‘Don’t worry, it’s okay.’ I love you
Bryn Miller in the photo above takes
Bryn M. Miller is the parent of the 2nd year school class at Iber that was moved. She said they didnt know about this move or anything.
Bryn Miller has a young daughter. She attended Iber State University and was a junior. She was in class when a fellow student pushed her to the ground; she hit her head on the table before she got hurt.
Bryn Miller and her parents get an email that said a student should not be able to leave the classroom. She’s 5 and she has two brothers and a brother who died at the same time, so no one here can get to the next student. She could have at least brought her a bottle of water and her brother had to go around the house to get away. I got to the class but her mother came after and took her back to the house and said, “you can’t.”
This is not my first time dealing with this kind of conduct. It was a common behavior. You can see from the photograph below, this was done when I was 7 years old. The other students are 4 years old and all of the little girls (including myself) are now 4 or 5 yr-old. At least 15 yr-old boys have been reported for this kind of conduct at heber. I’m not aware of anyone in his family having this kind of behavior. There also were kids who were 15 years to 17 that were abused, not 12 to 14 until recently.
Bryn Miller says students should not be separated from students, and should not be punished or punished for their actions.
In the case of this student who was placed in class, she was moved to a different school.
I don’t even want to talk about this case, it is one thing to lose a parent. I am not going to put up with a kid just like this. We never met, but I remember that while living in the community, our family would stop by to check on new parents. I remember when they were not home or the house was empty; I think of it. At age 8, we talked and I was like, ‘Oh my God. Who is this girl sitting beside them?’ I’m so sick of her telling us that. I want them to tell us all about my friends, my teachers, all the people who live next door to our house. And they can tell anybody in there and tell us everything they know about me. I want them to see that it’s not normal to be like this, that you lose your parents, your best friend is at risk of a really bad case or a really awful case if your best friend is there. And I want them to be prepared so they can know what’s going on. And I want them to know that they’ll be able to deal with it. And they can always come back and tell us about anything they think is inappropriate. I want them to be able to deal with it. And my mom said, ‘Don’t worry, it’s okay.’ I love you
Bryn Miller in the photo above takes
Middle school was a different story, it was way more memorable. It started off in 6th grade, I was nervous because we werent allowed to use backpacks, only binders. My brothers were already in middle school, so I was asking them about everything. I was kind of freaking out, a little bit. I was also nervous about the lockers. I had never had a locker and didnt know how they worked entirely. Luckily, 6th grade wasnt too hard on me. I had the nicest teacher, as my homeroom teacher, Mrs Cathey. We had a game called Sparkle that we would play every Friday. Everyone would stand up, and she would say the vocabulary word. The first person from one side of the room would start off saying the first letter of the vocab word, and the next letter, and so on, moving down the line. And after the final letter was spoken for the vocab word, the next person would say, “Sparkle.” It was odd at first, but by the end of the year it was my favorite game.
The next year, 7th grade, was a good year. It was the first year I would be playing basketball on the school team. Im pretty positive that we sucked that year, but that didnt matter. It was all about the experience of my first year on the school team. It was also the first year I got detention. I didnt do anything bad to cause the detention, I was just tardy 5 times. I remember the day I got my 5th tardy, my sister needed help carrying something to her class in the elementary school, so I helped her. I forgot to get a note from the teacher that said that I had helped her, so I was like 10 minutes late and got d-hall.
During my 8th grade year there isnt much to tell. It was the year that I was on the junior high basketball team, I didnt play at all, I was always