Tuesday, 26 April 2016

Some random thoughts

I was watching a video on the Genius of Tyrion, and one of the points they made was how he always tries to empathise with his adversaries and find out what they WANT. He'll do this either by asking directly, "What do you want?" or by other means.

Anyway, it got me thinking, how would I respond if Tyrion asked me that question? I guess I have the same desires as most people; wealth, health, knowledge, power, respect, etc... As a teacher, I've realised that I've been getting my students to ask themselves this, but never really asked it to myself.

So after some thought, I've come to the conclusion that I want to be the best teacher ever. (Very humble, I know) And as many people who set big goals in these terms (eg, best football player, best speller, etc...), it mostly comes down to dedication, persistence and hard work. But to be the best teacher... How would you do that? I guess it depends on one's perspective on what being a "good teacher" is.

For me, having a class score well in tests isn't the ultimate goal. For me, to be the best teacher, it would mean that any students you have will be the best students (in terms of whatever the goal you want them to accomplish is). But then, to have the best students, they would need to have had great teachers along the way to get them there. So in the end, to be the best teacher, you'd need to be in a school with all the best teachers who work together for a common goal - the students.

I think I read an article that elaborated on this (in a much more easy to follow way!) during university, and it really rings true. You can't really be the "best teacher" alone. If you were, then you would be lying to yourself because if you had the "best class", that'd be the accumulation of all the hard work teachers before you, the foundations they laid for you in order for them to be where they are. It really is a heavily team-based task. One weak link/wrong turn along the way and you can lose a handful of students for the rest of their school lives. Or worse, for the rest of their living lives.

I've come to realise that I've been looking at it wrong the whole time. To be the best teacher, we need to work as a team. But then you have to jump over the hurdles of politics, red tape, and the other usual office obstacles.

Hmm.

I guess on the bright side, I have something to work with. A more refined goal. Now, just like I do with Starcraft, basketball, CS:GO, working out, etc... I just need to think of the mini goals to take me in the right direction and checkpoints to measure progress.

Though, I feel that to do this, we'll need to dramatically change the way we look at schools, teachers, students, learning and teaching. Just a hunch. (Just kidding, there's plenty of TEDTalks that address this and lots of various articles if you Google it too I'm sure!)

Anyway, random thoughts of the day, over and out.


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