Drawing a deer. How hard can it be - there are only four steps, right? Teaching is much the same. |
So this is a plea for recognition - because teaching sounds relatively easy. And we've all been to school, so we know a bit about it right? But I suggest that the term teaching is very much like wrap it. Simple sounding - but when you look at "teaching students" and unpack it, you end up asking things like: Where do I stand when they enter? With what tone and body stance do I greet them? How do I create a supportive but demanding atmosphere? How much should I recap the previous lesson? How do I cater for the student with limited English? Or the one whose parents are splitting up? Or the one whose tutor taught the topic to him yesterday? How do I support the one who did not do her homework in a way that does not signal to others that I don't really care about it being done? What about the one whose mental health is a worry, and who was away last lesson? When someone arrives late, do I help them, ignoring the others, or just let them flounder for a bit? And what's the best way of crafting an activity to explore the difference between validity and truth (one that allows access to the strugglers, but stretches the swiftest)?
And then of course, there's the human element of the job - which is actually the central part. Ryan again: A teacher must simultaneously explain the content correctly, make the material interesting, ensure that students are staying on task and understanding the material, and be ready to deal with the curve balls that will be thrown at her every 15 seconds—without flinching—for five hours. If, for some reason, she is not able to inspire, educate, and relate to 30 students at once, she has to be ready to get them back on track, because no matter what students say or do to detract from the lesson, they want structure, they want to learn, and they want to be prepared for life.
When it's going well, Ryan explain that he experience[s] more failure every five minutes of teaching than [he] experienced in an entire week as an engineer, and poignantly explains that a difficult moment in engineering involves a customer in a big meeting pointing out a design problem that I hadn’t considered. The customer’s concerns can be eased with a carefully crafted statement along the lines of, “You’re right. We’ll look into it.” A difficult moment in teaching involves a student—one who has a history of being bullied and having suicidal thoughts—telling me that she is pregnant 30 seconds before class starts. What carefully crafted statement will help her?
As a principal and a parent, therefore, I dedicate this blog to all those teachers out there, who wrap it day in, day out, who are always there for their kids, who are more skilled than they themselves realise, and who, more than any technology, curriculum or policy, make magic for students around the world everyday.
References
Fuller R. (2013) Teaching Isn’t Rocket Science. It’s Harder. Slate Magazine
Willingham, D., (2013) Why Americans stink at Maths. Science & Education.
You made me cry. Oh dear, how much I miss teaching
ReplyDeleteYour blog beautifully encapsulates the multiple roles a teacher has to play simultaneously. This necessitates the need for a unique training for teachers where they would be ready to be a counselor, a mediator and facilitator for learning (and many other roles) at the same Time. Do workshops for teachers deal with such a demand or are they narrowly designed for better content delivery.
ReplyDeleteThanks for comment. Yes, workshops do address these skills; as always the issue is the time to get everyone access to them, ans the time to consolidate and intentionally practice. But yes, for sure these are available.
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