Inspiration & Honesty from the Inside: Peter Greene to Teachers in the Classroom
Originally posted at Curmudgucation in December 2013, a
worthwhile and often brilliant blog site from teacher Peter Greene. Also re-published by Huffington in July of
2014. (h/t Kris Heiting)
The Hard Part
They never tell you in teacher school, and it's rarely
discussed elsewhere. It is never, ever portrayed in movies and tv shows about
teaching. Teachers rarely bring it up around non-teachers for fear it will make
us look weak or inadequate.
Valerie Strauss
in yesterday's Washington Post put together a series of quotes to
answer the question "How hard is teaching?" and asked for more in the
comments section. My rant didn't entirely fit there, so I'm putting it here,
because it is on the list of Top Ten Things They Never Tell You in Teacher
School.
The hard part of teaching is coming to grips with this:
There is never enough.
There is never enough time. There are never enough resources.
There is never enough you.
As a teacher, you can see what a perfect job in your classroom
would look like. You know all the assignments you should be giving. You know
all the feedback you should be providing your students. You know all the
individual crafting that should provide for each individual's instruction. You
know all the material you should be covering. You know all the ways in which,
when the teachable moment emerges (unannounced as always), you can greet it
with a smile and drop everything to make it grow and blossom.
You know all this, but you can also do the math. 110 papers
about the view of death in American Romantic writing times 15 minutes to
respond with thoughtful written comments equals-- wait! what?! That CAN'T be
right! Plus quizzes to assess where we are in the grammar unit in order to
design a new remedial unit before we craft the final test on that unit (five
minutes each to grade). And that was before Ethel made that comment about Poe
that offered us a perfect chance to talk about the gothic influences. And I
know that if my students are really going to get good at writing, they should
be composing something at least once a week. And if I am going to prepare my
students for life in the real world, I need to have one of my own to be
credible.
If you are going to take any control of your professional life,
you have to make some hard, conscious decisions. What is it that I know I
should be doing that I am not going to do?
Every year you get better. You get faster, you learn tricks,
you learn which corners can more safely be cut, you get better at predicting
where the student-based bumps in the road will appear. A good administrative
team can provide a great deal of help.
But every day is still educational triage. You will pick and
choose your battles, and you will always be at best bothers, at worst haunted,
by the things you know you should have done but didn't. Show me a teacher who
thinks she's got everything all under control and doesn't need to fix a thing
for next year, and I will show you a lousy teacher. The best teachers I've ever
known can give you a list of exactly what they don't do well enough yet.
Not everybody can deal with this. I had a colleague (high
school English) years ago who was a great classroom teacher. But she gave every
assignment that she knew she should, and so once a grading period, she took a
personal day to sit at home and grade papers for 18 hours straight. She was
awesome, but she left teaching, because doing triage broke her heart.
So if you show up at my door saying, "Here's a box from
Pearson. Open it up, hand out the materials, read the script, and stick to the
daily schedule. Do that, and your classroom will work perfectly," I will
look you in your beady eyes and ask, "Are you high? Are you stupid?"
Because you have to be one of those. Maybe both.
Here's your metaphor for the day.
Teaching is like painting a huge Victorian mansion. And you
don't actually have enough paint. And when you get to some section of the house
it turns out the wood is a little rotten or not ready for the paint. And about
every hour some supervisor comes around and asks you get down off the ladder
and explain why you aren't making faster progress. And some days the weather is
terrible. So it takes all your art and skill and experience to do a job where
the house still ends up looking good.
Where are school reformy folks in this metaphor? They're the
ones who show up and tell you that having a ladder is making you lazy, and you
should work without. They're the ones who take a cup of your paint every day to
paint test strips on scrap wood, just to make sure the paint is okay (but now
you have less of it). They're the ones who show up after the work is done and
tell passerbys, "See that one good-looking part? That turned out good
because the painters followed my instructions." And they're most
especially the ones who turn up after the job is complete to say, "Hey,
you missed a spot right there on that one board under the eaves."
There isn't much discussion of the not-enough problem. Movie
and tv teachers never have it (high school teachers on television only ever
teach one class a day!). And teachers hate to bring it up because we know it
just sounds like whiny complaining.
But all the other hard part of teaching-- the technical issues
of instruction and planning and individualization and being our own
"administrative assistants" and acquiring materials and designing
unit plans and assessment-- all of those issues rest solidly on the foundation
of Not Enough.
Trust us. We will suck it up. We will make do. We will Find A
Way. We will even do that when the people tasked with helping us do all that on
the state and federal level instead try to make it harder. Even though we can't
get to perfect, we can steer toward it. But if you ask me what the hard part of
teaching is, hands down, this wins.
There's not enough.
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