What is YOUR teaching story starter?
I have been thinking a lot lately about why teachers become teachers. I know the media and the teacher-bashers have it all wrong. It’s not all about wanting summers off or a cushy job. Three posts/articles got my attention this week on the related topics of teacher respect and recruitment. An April Fool’s “memo” from a school administrator mentioned Finland’s teacher education programs that skim la creme de la creme to enter teacher preparation after two years of college performance. This would imply that Finns choose teaching because it is a place to work among very smart, well-prepared people. A New York Times Op Ed described a writer’s personal experience with teachers, describing an experience and appreciation similar to my own. Perhaps that writer’s teachers chose teaching because they could encourage and challenge students beyond where they went themselves. A series of suggestions from “debaters” also in the Times tout different strategies for raising the status of teachers. These various suggestions imply that money, autonomy, professional growth, supply and demand, and various other factors drive the choices of 18 to 22 year olds to consider teaching.
We should be asking good teachers the question: Why did you choose teaching? To reach a consensus of what a good teacher is for this exercise, I would propose using teacher-leaders respected by a broad spectrum of their peers and/or credited by former students as having had profound impact — in both public and private teaching settings. I have some ideas of what they might say, though we know the responses would vary each decade since the 1960s and 1970s, when opportunities for women changed dramatically. Some responses I suspect we would hear:
- I did well in school, so I like being around schools.
- My teachers were nice to me, and I liked the idea of paying it forward.
- I liked the idea of doing something a little different every day.
- I grew up in a family of teachers.
- A teacher changed my life.
- I thought that was what a smart girl was supposed to do.
- Teaching was the only thing I knew you could do if you loved (fill in the subject here).
- I was more comfortable around kids than adults.
- I love learning new things.
- Teachers get to be creative.
- I couldn’t afford to be a writer/artist, so I decided to teach.
- I always wanted to be a coach, and you have to teach to coach.
- I love to read.
- It feels good to teach people things.
- I like words and can explain anything.
- I like the way a kid looks at me when he “gets it.”
- Teachers get to laugh and make kids laugh.
- add your teacher story starter here
What is probably not on the list:
- I like measuring learning by tests.
- I like using cold, hard data to describe my work.
- I like following someone else’s script.
- I like going to meetings.
- I like having people write letters to the editor about how lazy I am.
- I like being lazy.
- I like being in the middle of domestic disputes.
- I like the thrill of violence.
- add your own unlikely response here
If you are a good teacher or know one, please ask him/her this question and share the responses — and NOT responses — here. You can put “anonymous” as your name. Or just pass the question along on Twitter or Facebook or any other way, tagging it #whyteach. Maybe someone will notice that it’s not all about summer vacations.