What makes a good teacher? (1)
(2009-03-30 16:07:15)
标签:
teacher教育 |
分类: 影视书刊 |
What Makes A Good Teacher?
Marie F. Hassett, Ph.D.
Bricolage, Inc.,
Jamaica Plain, MA
I have been teaching for the last ten years. During that time, I have workedin public schools, universities, extracurricular programs for K-12, adult basic literacy, and adult enrichment classes. My youngest student was a 6 year-old budding actress in a town-sponsored arts enrichment program for elementary students; my oldest, a Jamaican immigrant, a grandmother beginning at the age of 63 to learn how to read. I've taught honors students in a college humanities program, and severely handicapped youth in a public high school.
The breadth of my experience has enriched my teaching life, but left me without a luxury some of my colleagues enjoy-the sense, as I walk into a new class, for a new term, that I know what my students will need, and how best to share it with them. This is not to say that I've been tossed blind into the classroom. In most cases, I've had enough prep time to gather what seem like appropriate materials, and find out something about the students I'll be working with. What I have not had is the critical mass of sameness that accrues to the teacher who stays in the same setting, at the same level, for many years in a row. I cannot assume that what worked last semester will work this time.
As a result of my ever-changing context, I've spent a lot of time thinking about the craft and practice of teaching, as separate from course content, age of students, size of class, or institutional setting. Everywhere I go, I meet exemplary teachers, and I've been interested in figuring out what makes them so good. What I've discovered is the inherent sameness of good teachers, regardless of the substantial differences between them in terms of style, personality, goals, and pattern of interaction with students. I would go so far as to say that good teachers, in all settings and at all levels, have more in common with each other than any of them may have with their colleagues in comparable positions.
In order to understand the bold statement above, try the following exercise. Sit back, close your eyes, and bring to mind the three best teachers you ever had. Try to remember what they were like-how they looked, talked and acted, what their classrooms and/or offices were like, how they made you feel as their student. When you're satisfied that you've gotten a good picture of who these people were, open your eyes, and consider the words of educator and philosopher Parker Palmer:
Good teaching isn't about technique. I've asked students around the country to describe their good teachers to me. Some of them describe people who lecture all the time, some of them describe people who do little other than facilitate group process, and others describe everything in between. But all of them describe people who have some sort of connective capacity, who connect themselves to their students, their students to each other, and everyone to the subject being studied. (1999, p. 27)
Do you recognize your best teachers in this description? When we talk about the quality of someone's teaching, we address issues of technique, content, and presentation. But we all know people who have tremendous knowledge but fail to communicate it: people who have, on paper, a great lesson, but whose students are bored or frustrated. When we're being honest, we admit that good teaching often has less to do with our knowledge and skills than with our attitude towards our students, our subject, and our work.
The rest of this article will address some of the characteristics that good teachers exhibit. It is not meant to be all encompassing or definitive; many excellent teachers may possess only some of these traits, and consider others not mentioned to be just as valuable. The characteristics detailed here may be viewed simply as a selection of tools that allow teachers to create and sustain connectivity in their classrooms.
Good teachers:
• have a sense of purpose;
• have expectations of success for all students;
• tolerate ambiguity;
• demonstrate a willingness to adapt and change to meet
student needs;
• are comfortable with not knowing;
• reflect on their work;
• learn from a variety of models;
• enjoy their work and their students.
Good teachers have
a sense of purpose.
You can't be good in a generic sense; you have to be good for
something. As a teacher, this means that you know what your
students expect, and you make plans to meet those expectations.
You, too, have expectations about what happens in your classroom,
based on the goals you're trying to achieve. If you want to prepare
your students for employment, you expect punctuality and good
attendance. If you teach a GED class, you spend time explaining the
format of the test and helping students to improve their
test-taking skills. And if you want your students to become better,
more involved readers, you allow time for reading and provide
access to books.
Good teachers have
expectations of success for all students.
This is the great paradox of teaching. If we base our
self-evaluation purely on the success of our students, we'll be
disappointed. At all levels, but especially in adult education,
there are simply too many factors in students'lives for a teacher
to be able to guarantee success to all. At the same time, if we
give up on our students, adopting a fatalistic, "it's out of my
hands" attitude, students will sense our lack of commitment and
tune out. The happy medium can be achieved with a simple question:
Did I do everything that I could in this class, this time, to meet
the needs of all my students, assuming that complete success was
possible? As long as you can answer in the affirmative, you're
creating a climate for success.
Good teachers know
how to live with ambiguity.
One of the greatest challenges of teaching stems from the lack of
immediate, accurate feedback. The student who walks out of your
classroom tonight shaking his head and muttering under his breath
about algebra may burst into class tomorrow proclaiming his triumph
over math, and thanking you for the previous lesson. There is no
way to predict precisely what the long-term results of our work
will be. But if we have a sense of purpose informing our choice of
strategies and materials, and we try to cultivate expectations of
success for all our students, we will be less likely to dwell on
that unpredictability, choosing instead to focus on what we can
control, and trusting that thoughtful preparation makes good
outcomes more likely than bad ones.
Good teachers adapt
and change to meet student needs.
Can we really claim to have taught a class in geography if no one
learned any of the concepts in the lesson from our presentation? If
none of our students ever pick up a book outside of the classroom,
have we really taught them to be better readers? We don't always
think about these issues, but they are at the heart of effective
teaching. A great lesson plan and a great lesson are two entirely
different things; it's nice when one follows the other, but we all
know that it doesn't always work out that way. We teach so that
students will learn, and when learning doesn't happen, we need to
be willing to devise new strategies, think in new ways, and
generally do anything possible to revive the learning process. It's
wonderful to have a good methodology, but it's better to have
students engaged in good learning.
Good teachers are
reflective.
This may be the only infallible, absolute characteristic of all
good teachers, because without it, none of the other traits we've
discussed can fully mature. Good teachers routinely think about and
reflect on their classes, their students, their methods, and their
materials. They compare and contrast, draw parallels and
distinctions, review, remove and restore. Failing to observe what
happens in our classes on a daily basis disconnects us from the
teaching and learning process, because it's impossible to create
connectivity if you've disconnected yourself.
Good teachers are
comfortable with not knowing.
If we reflect honestly and thoughtfully on what happens in our
classes, we will often find dilemmas we cannot immediately resolve,
questions we cannot answer. In his Letters to a Young Poet, Rainer
Maria Rilke suggests that his correspondent, "try to love the
questions themselves as if they were locked rooms or books written
in a very foreign language…. Live the questions now. Perhaps then,
someday far in the future, you will gradually, without even
noticing it, live your way into the answer" (1986, pp. 34-35). In
the same way, our teaching benefits if we can live for a little
while with a question, think and observe, and let an answer develop
in response to the specific situation we face.
Good teachers had
good role models.
Think back again to your three best teachers. How has your own
teaching been shaped by their practices, consciously or
unconsciously? Think also of the worst teacher you ever had. Are
there things you absolutely will not do because you remember how
devastating they were to you or your classmates? We learn to teach
gradually, and absorb ideas and practices from a variety of
sources. How many movies have you seen that include a teacher as a
character, and how might those films have contributed to your
practice? We are not always aware of the influences on our
teaching, good and bad; reflecting on the different models of
teaching we've acquired, and looking at how we acquired them, makes
us better able to adapt and change to suit new challenges.
Good teachers enjoy
their work and their students.
This may seem obvious, but it's easy to lose sight of its
importance. Teachers who enjoy their work and their students are
motivated, energized, and creative. The opposite of enjoyment is
burnout-the state where no one and nothing can spark any interest.
Notice, too, that enjoying your work and enjoying your students may
be two different things. Focusing too much on content may make
students feel extraneous, misunderstood, or left out. Focusing
exclusively on students, without an eye to content, may make
students feel understood and appreciated, but may not help them to
achieve their educational goals as quickly as they'd like.
Achieving a balance between the two extremes takes time and
attention; it demands that we observe closely, evaluate carefully,
and act on our findings.
I would like to conclude with a poem by Lao-Tzu, the Chinese
scholar to whom the Tao Te Ching is attributed. I have carried a
copy of this poem with me for many years, and I find its message
both helpful and challenging. It reminds us that good teaching is
not a static state, but a constant process. We have new
opportunities to become better teachers every day; good teachers
are the ones who seize more opportunities than they miss.
Some say that my teaching is nonsense.
Others call it lofty but impractical.
But to those who have looked inside themselves,
this nonsense makes perfect sense.
And to those who put it into practice,
this loftiness has roots that go deep.
I have just three things to teach:
simplicity, patience, compassion.
Simple in actions and thoughts,
you return to the source of being.
Patient with both friends and enemies,
you accord with the way things are.
Compassionate toward yourself,
You reconcile all being in the world. (1989, 17)
Works Cited
Mitchell, Stephen, ed. (1989). The Enlightened Heart. NY: Harper
& Row.
_____, trans. (1986). Letters to a Young Poet, by Rainer Maria
Rilke. NY: Vintage Books.
Palmer, Parker. (1999). "The Grace of Great Things: Reclaiming the
Sacred in Knowing, Teaching, and Learning." In The Heart of
Knowing: Spirituality in Education. Ed. Stephen Glazer. NY: Jeremy
P. Tarcher/Putnam.
Originally published in Adventures in
Assessment,
Volume 12 (Winter 2000),
SABES/World Education, Boston, MA, Copyright 2000.
Funding support for the publication of this document on the Web provided in part by the Ohio State Literacy Resource Center as part of the LINCS Assessment Special Collection.