This afternoon I was watching one of my classes take an in-class history essay. Most of them didn’t look like they were enjoying the experience.
While I had nearly an hour to kill, observing the squirming year 9 faces, my mind wandered to my old high school teachers.
From what I remember, some were really good. Others were adequate. A few were woeful.
My judgement, even though I am now a teacher myself, hasn’t really changed from what I held a few decades ago.
The good teachers were still good. The toilers were still adequate. The woeful teachers were still rather garbage.
But, now, I can reflect back upon their assessment techniques and pedagogy.
Previously, my judgement was far more relational.
As a student, it was far more about enthusiasm and passion.
In reality, a good teacher needs all of these qualities. The traits that the students will value - enthusiasm, passion, friendliness, fairness - and the qualities which a colleague will notice - good practice, effective admin, a productive learning environment, successful outcomes - must go hand-in-hand.
Nonetheless, it is with active teaching experience that I’m now able to appreciate my high school teachers.
The more I do, the better I appreciate what they did.
Or, frankly, what they didn’t do.
The same thing happened when I was a youth minister.
For, your depth of appreciation is aligned with your experience.
And, those you initially thought were good - remain quality - except now you have a far richer justification.
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