Mr. Wasserman re-directs

Thanks to Jose for pointing me towards Mr. Wasserman who I NEED to applaud for writing this:

I don’t want this to be a complaining post. Nobody likes reading those, for starters, and May is such a great time of year to try to be happy. So instead, I’ve been thinking about things I can do which will raise my ability to respect myself as a teacher, which should translate into improvements, at least in my immediate sphere.

I’m digging the way he re-focuses his malaise towards what we can do to create positive change. How many times have I heard complaints about how our students:

  • disrespect each other, their teachers, and everyone else
  • drop n bombs, f bombs (the ones about a certain physical activity AND sexual orientations), S bombs (in our school, these have to do with the students from the Kanhwake first nations’ reserve in the area)…
  • just don’t care

It is rare that I see someone considering what to do as an alternative to complaining. Mr. Wasserman reflectively concludes:

But I want to focus on giving my students only meaningful work to do, only things that have a clear value to them. the trick, I suppose, is to figure out what those things are.

Yes, that is the trick. And I think it is really easy to do –> We need to spend more time talking with our students than at them. Well, at least the first part is easy. The second part is integrating what we find out with the curriculum we are teaching. I think that is what makes teaching an art.

I’ll be heading back to read Mr. Wasserman again.
Thanks Jose.

5 Comments

  • Tracy says:

    Hi Steve,
    I agree, it is a challenging job – one of the most difficult there is. A creative balancing act, a performance piece! And when it is done with both the heart and the mind it…well, it rocks! :)
    Nice to see you again,
    t

  • Steve Ransom says:

    Giving students meaningful work is so “right”, but I don’t think it is always that easy to do with all of the competing distractions, restrictions, regulations, and responsibilities that come in to play for teachers. You are right in your statement that it is in making those logical connections between students and curriculum that is most difficult at times. That creative/artisitic component is crutial, for sure.

  • tracy says:

    Welcome! Glad to see you :)

  • Thanks, Tracy…I’m about to dive in to your blog. Can’t wait.

  • jose says:

    That’s how I roll. You’re welcome. He was a good pick-up in my RSS feed. Hope he replies to you as enthusiastically.

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