Dr. Wendy Ghiora January 27, 2012 - Posting #102
The other day I was thinking about my first teaching job. I was initially hired as remedial reading teacher for ninth through twelfth grade students at a public high school in Los Angeles County. By the second year, I was teaching four classes of English and one class of Modern Dance. The dance class came about through the efforts of a few of my reading students. As I recalled the intensity and pure joy exhibited during most of our class workouts, the idea of a teacher’s “two loves” hit me.
Love What You Teach
One of a teacher’s loves has got to be her subject. Any student readily knows when a teacher is teaching something they love. Great teachers not only love their subject, but they love to share that joy with students.
When I was about to finish high school, a group of us who were planning to become teachers had a lively discussion at lunch one day. Since many of us had the same classes, someone asked: “Who was your favorite teacher?” After each student answered, this question followed: "What do they all have in common?" I immediately knew the answer, "They all loved what they were doing. They had great enthusiasm for teaching." All of my fellow graduating students nodded their heads in agreement. One of them, to punctuate the point, said "Exactly!"
I can’t tell you how much pleasure I had dancing and teaching my students the love I had for the most beautiful, pure art form ever; dance. The students picked up on the enthusiasm and had as much fun or maybe even more fun than I did during class. In the process they learned: discipline, technique, rhythm, music, choreography, performance skills, team work and much more.
If you love what you are doing you will be successful.
- Albert Schweitzer
Love Who You Teach
Terrific teachers love their students. They enjoy being with young people who are full of energy and always on the edge of discovery. These teachers have a special knack for connecting with students, and for helping them open their minds.
Good teachers are those who genuinely care about their students, not only in matters regarding education, but in other aspects outside of the classroom as well. Because of the devotion good teachers have to their students, they care about each student’s performance in school and are willing to spend a few minutes of their time to understand a struggling student’s circumstances.
Good teachers are not only teachers; they are mentors, friends and inspirations.
This is really the key component to teaching – love. Without a love of the subject and of the students, a teacher can never truly be successful.
Love is a better teacher than duty.
Albert Einstein
Thursday, January 26, 2012
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