28-04 2020 15:46
wrote:
I taught Dawid in S2 and he had a sense of humour that brightened everybody's day. He was a bright spark, a person who looked at things differently and in such a way that it made you see things differently, too. I remember him asking big questions about the paradoxes of time travel and thinking, "Jeezo, we're really getting into it here!" He was never afraid to question the things he disagreed with either, a rare and valuable quality.
Over the last year we got into a routine: when I saw Dawid in the corridors I would ask him how his day was going, he would reply and with a warm smile ask me how my day was going too. I remember thinking on more than one occasion, "It'd be nice to teach him again."
It makes me terribly sad to think that no one else will get to know him or how special he was, and I know many other teachers who feel the same. My thoughts are with him and his family. Miss Wright
28-04 2020 15:46
wrote:
I taught Dawid in S2 and he had a sense of humour that brightened everybody's day. He was a bright spark, a person who looked at things differently and in such a way that it made you see things differently, too. I remember him asking big questions about the paradoxes of time travel and thinking, "Jeezo, we're really getting into it here!" He was never afraid to question the things he disagreed with either, a rare and valuable quality.
Over the last year we got into a routine: when I saw Dawid in the corridors I would ask him how his day was going, he would reply and with a warm smile ask me how my day was going too. I remember thinking on more than one occasion, "It'd be nice to teach him again."
It makes me terribly sad to think that no one else will get to know him or how special he was, and I know many other teachers who feel the same. My thoughts are with him and his family. Miss Wright