1
   

A Good Teacher

 
 
skinny
 
Reply Sat 30 Oct, 2004 04:54 am
When I taught in language schools it was not uncommon to hear teachers say they dreaded teaching a certain group or particular level or grammatical point. But, strangely enough, there was always someone in the school who found that same group, structure or level to be the most enjoyable to teach. Ever since then whenever a class, a lesson or a grammatical explanation doesn't work I never blame the students. I always blame myself. The most important things a teacher takes to a classroom are her enthusiasm and willingness to learn to teach. Some method books are more interesting or; let's be honest, easier to teach than others, but that's no excuse for skipping the sections - a common practice - that are boring or complicated to explain. It's the teacher, not the student, who makes learning easy or difficult, fun or boring. Therein lies the challenge and the reward.
Gordon
  • Topic Stats
  • Top Replies
  • Link to this Topic
Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 608 • Replies: 1
No top replies

 
oristarA
 
  1  
Reply Sat 30 Oct, 2004 09:43 am
Your spirit was praisable, but you might have overly blamed yourself. Since one teacher is different to another, and so is a student. When considering all teachers in the world as an entity, the entity can be perfect, because it can teach any students in accordance with their aptitude. But no one can substitute the entity, so you should not always blame yourself.

But blaming students is dangerous. How about going between?
0 Replies
 
 

Related Topics

deal - Question by WBYeats
Let pupils abandon spelling rules, says academic - Discussion by Robert Gentel
Please, I need help. - Question by imsak
Is this sentence grammatically correct? - Question by Sydney-Strock
"come from" - Question by mcook
concentrated - Question by WBYeats
 
  1. Forums
  2. » A Good Teacher
Copyright © 2024 MadLab, LLC :: Terms of Service :: Privacy Policy :: Page generated in 0.03 seconds on 09/28/2024 at 07:19:40