I don’t remember very much about third grade except that I had a teacher I really liked. Her name was Mrs. Ellsworth. She taught third and fourth grade. She was a good teacher and I enjoyed her class a lot. I think it was Mrs. Ellsworth who introduced us to SRA reading books. They were small books that varied in reading difficulty and vocabulary. They were in a big box and they were color coded. In our spare time we could check them out and read them and then take a test. As we progressed, the books got more difficult but it was a challenge we liked. Since I was a pretty good reader, I moved right through them.
As I may have mentioned earlier, each class room in Heber had two grades, usually with one grade on one side of the room and the other on the other side. The teacher would teach one subject to one grade and then move over and teach a subject to the other grade. During the day we usually got taught spelling, reading, arithmetic, history or geography, science and then there were some subjects that were not taught every day like music and art.
We had recess twice a day, one midway through the morning and one midway through the afternoon. School ran from 9am to 4PM as I recall. We had an hour for lunch and most kids who lived in town went home for lunch.
When I got to fourth grade, Mrs. Ellsworth was still my teacher. Sometimes she would let me help out with the third grade by giving them their spelling words or helping some of them with arithmetic or reading. One day Mom came to school and found me helping out with the third graders and she didn’t think that was a good idea. In the first place, I wasn’t trained to be a teacher. I certainly wasn’t being paid a teachers wage and, most of all, I wasn’t spending my time improving my own mind. She decided something needed to change.
She went and had a visit with Mr. Capps and the next thing I knew, I was moved out of fourth grade and into the fifth grade. Boy, was that a shock!! I went from being Mr. Know-it-all to Mr. Know-nothing. The reading was OK, but in arithmetic they were doing multiplication and division and I hadn’t even heard of the multiplication tables. I was completely lost and a little scared. To add to my fear, the teacher in fifth grade was the notorious Mrs. Bankhead. Everyone knew that she was mean!!! She threw hot water on trick-or-treaters, she had dead bodies in her basement, she concocted strange potions and everyone knew she ate dumb little kids who didn’t do well in her class. I was terrified and with good cause. I don’t think she was very happy to have some “smart kid” moved up a grade into her class and I think she set out to prove it shouldn’t be done. What she hadn’t figured on was my Mom. (See Fifth grade)