Michael Commane
The wait is over and the class of 2014 heads out into the
world. Good luck and God bless all 56,990 of them.
The results were published the day after the world
learned of the death of Robin Williams. I always associate Williams with the
film Dead Poets’ Society. It was
brilliant and inspirational. To be able to inspire young people as ‘John
Keating’ did in that film surely is the magic that can make teaching so
special.
Keating’s teaching was considered ‘unorthodox’ in the
conservative and posh school in Vermont. But he managed to get the students to
think for themselves and inspired in them a genuine interest in learning and
discovery.
I still find myself looking through the jobs’ pages in
the newspapers, checking if there is any school looking for a German/English
teacher. And then it dawns on me that it makes no sense. I was 65 in April and
my teaching days in the classroom are over, over forever. And that’s a horrible
thought.
I’ve done different things. Started off in teaching,
indeed, probably spent most of my working years as a teacher but I also worked
as a journalist and am still in gainful employment, working in a press office.
On top of that I happen to be a Dominican priest.
Maybe there is a closeness between teaching and
journalism but the interaction between students and teacher makes teaching a
special trade.
It’s three years since I was last in a classroom and the
Class of 2014 includes a small group of girls and boys to whom I taught English
in first year in a school in West Kerry.
They are now, along with their peers, about to embrace a
new world of adventure.
Teaching can never be taken as a chore. Of course, like
every job, humdrum daily routine sets in. We all have the potential to get lazy
and sloppy. But the job of the teacher is always to inspire, to push the
students so that they will get interested and excited about the subject they
are learning. Always asking questions, wanting to find out more. The good
teacher is always someone who in the end finds themselves redundant – their
students don’t need them any longer. They might even know more than their
teacher.
Of course programmes have to be adhered to, courses have
to be followed and taught. Discipline, in all its forms and shapes, is an
essential and intrinsic part of teaching. But is there enough excitement and
sheer adventure surrounding teaching so that students can be fired and enthused
to love the subject or topic they are learning?
It’s more than likely the gifted student, the student who
comes from a background where learning is appreciated, will always do fine. But
what are we doing for all those who drop out of school, what are we doing for
those who hate every minute of the school day? And there are too many who fall
short, are unhappy in school and consider the experience a drudge from morning
until the last class. Are we concentrating too much on an academic model to the
detriment of other forms of learning? Probably.
No society can ever afford to turn a blind eye on those
who slip through the system.
According to an OECD survey carried out in October 2013
one in six Irish adults have literacy difficulties and one in four have
problems with numeracy.
Is that not the particular charism of the teacher, to
make sure that that student, who thinks it’s all a bore, is won over and realises
that learning is an exciting adventure?
4 comments:
I was waiting for your crack at the church, the priesthood or the religious order you belong to but none came. Is this a record? And you write really well when yu are not distracted by your hobby horses
Thank you for your compliment. I don't think it is a record. Check my 'Thinking Anew' column in last Saturday's Irish Times. I don't think there is any evidence of the 'hobby horse' syndrome. I should take your advice. I'm wondering do I know you?
Forgot to mention I have a 'hobby horse' about anonymous contributors.
Enjoyed that column. Nice balance.
I agee about teachers inspiring pupils and provoking their curiosity.
I had Michael Judge for English and he was great. Told us the faster we got through the course the sooner we could do some new and exciting stuff: Beckett, Hopkins, Owen & Sassoon etc. And that was in the early 1960s.
Don't know what your anonymous contributor is going on about. Your writing is always very positive and you did have a justifiable tilt at the Foolish Friar last week.
Rath ar an obair.
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