It's easy to become jaded in teaching. You see it everyday. Yet there are those that stay fresh year in year out. I believe I'm discovering their secret.
About two weeks ago, I said a short piece at the local parish about my teaching experiences during mass. Since then I have had about a dozen people come up and say how much they enjoyed the discussion. The talk focused on the successes in my teaching career. There was an aspect of respect in their voices when I discussed how we sought to improve the lives of the kids. It's been energising.
Today, some friends came back from Jakarta and we discussed again some of my teaching experiences this time with a more cynical tone. This time the discussion was more about the practical and self preservation aspect of teaching. The compromises that get made to ensure that teachers make it to the end of term. The times where you made practical decisions rather than the idealistic ones that I'm more known for. In this instance I felt deflated and the teaching profession looked more like a defeated organisation.
I realised afterwards that practicality be damned, I prefer seeking the idealistic path, as taking the practical path means that I accept the compromises that it requires. So, it takes an extra couple of hours out of each day to teach the way I like to teach. To compromise is to denigrate the profession we seek to promote and ultimately to lose face in the public's eye when we fail students (even if they don't appreciate/want/are resistant to the attention and effort that promotes their successes).
..and that's the need for public recognition of contributions by teachers - if nobody values or cares for the effort of our teachers, teachers don't know that the effort we put into students is recognised (or even required), whether the outcomes are worth seeking and the perseverance of improvement worth pursuing.
Sunday, October 4, 2009
Saturday, October 3, 2009
Interference in Teaching
University 4 year degree, WACOT, WWC, Federal police clearance, Curriculum Council and NCOS, National curriculum, ACARA & league tables, Scope and Sequence documents, moderation, compulsory PD, A-E exemplars, Independent schools, union politics, DET's squillion policies on everything and now a national teacher standards body (Gees thanks Julia!).
Can we possibly put more bureaucracy and BS between teachers and students?
Yes we can!
Can we possibly put more bureaucracy and BS between teachers and students?
Yes we can!
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Happiness and the mall.
Today I was walking down the mall, baby and wife in tow. It was a lovely day, baby was gurgling and we had just had a nice lunch in DJ's. The counterpoint to all this sappy contentedness was the hordes of unhappy people bustling around. Frowns, heads down, generally needing to be somewhere else.
Sometimes I think we all need to take a look around and enjoy life a bit. I suppose I have always been lucky, I have fallen into jobs that were fulfilling and challenging or alternatively sought ones that were - but they tended to be all consuming. Things can change quickly - I had a discussion with the man who was installing something at our house and in discussion he said his daughter died of cancer at age 17.
That would be life stopping. I can't imagine thinking how I would be if that happened to Mackenzie. It reminds you that we should try and enjoy every moment with our loved ones and seek to find ways of making best of what we have.
The good times need to be cherished.
Sometimes I think we all need to take a look around and enjoy life a bit. I suppose I have always been lucky, I have fallen into jobs that were fulfilling and challenging or alternatively sought ones that were - but they tended to be all consuming. Things can change quickly - I had a discussion with the man who was installing something at our house and in discussion he said his daughter died of cancer at age 17.
That would be life stopping. I can't imagine thinking how I would be if that happened to Mackenzie. It reminds you that we should try and enjoy every moment with our loved ones and seek to find ways of making best of what we have.
The good times need to be cherished.
Monday, September 28, 2009
Race for the galaxy
If you're a fan of this game and haven't seen the free AI written by Keldon Jones - go and grab it, it's fantastic.
If you're not a fan - don't bother, free or not you won't understand the appeal until you've played the card game (which will do your head in until you get the game mechanic, then you'll obsess over it and wonder why you found it so hard at first).
The most impressive thing (besides the AI) is the UI, it's neat, functional and fast. Yay!
If you're not a fan - don't bother, free or not you won't understand the appeal until you've played the card game (which will do your head in until you get the game mechanic, then you'll obsess over it and wonder why you found it so hard at first).
The most impressive thing (besides the AI) is the UI, it's neat, functional and fast. Yay!
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