I am reading a book called “The courage to teach: Exploring the inner landscape of a teacher’s life”. 20th anniversary ed. The concept is interesting and unique: it’s not about your teaching method, using all the right ways to reach “students today”. It is about exploring your own identity & inner workings of your heart & spirit as a teacher, so that you connect better with your own inner self and then, perhaps, your students. I find the concept refreshing,
Chapter 1, the Heart of a teacher, Identity and integrity in teaching.
Some thoughts: Who were my mentors?
For sure, my main mentor was my dad. Even though he didn’t live long enough for me to really know him as a teacher, as his child, I could see the effects. I could *feel* his love for teaching. We could see his love for his graduate students, who he would invite over to our house for dinner, one at a time. So our house was often filled with African and Indian students who came, smiled at us, were welcomed and treated as a fine guest in our home. As I have now been through graduate school, I realize how absolutely rare this is.
Secondly, he worked all weekend and most nights. On Saturdays he would be at the large dining room table, his papers all over it, working. But he worked in the midst of a family of 4 kids running around him, interrupting him to tell him something that happened or to ask a question. He never minded this. I don’t remember him ever being really angry. When he would get upset, he would walk out of the room.
Three, he was a seeker of truth. He questioned himself. He wondered about God but left it to the universe to show him He was real. He was a scientist at heart, loved studying rocks and fossils, taking vacations many times out West to look for them. They are all now lost “to the universe” as many things got lost over the years of moving. There was a rock collection which is now distributed amongst some of my kids, and some friends.
I never understood the Engineering world he lived in, but he was recognized in Who’s Who of Engineering more than once. He always put family first, or that’s how he made us feel. The most important thing in the world was just spending time with him, and he gave us that.
MENTORS. Another one of my favorite teachers was Miss Burkitt in 5th grade, the year my family lived in Michigan. What was great about that year & her teaching? She was very creative as a teacher, very forward-thinking, not afraid to try new things.
She had us correspond with kids in Scotland, or the Isle of Skye. We had pen pals. We also, for some reason, corresponded with men who worked on a ship, & it was an exciting day when we received letters back.
She let me work ahead in a math book, and I covered most of it in half a year. She made me feel smart. And one time, when I misbehaved, got mad at another student and threw a block at him (when we were stuck inside for recess due to weather), she did not play favorites and marched me to the Principal’s office. This year was also the year Pres. Kennedy was shot, and I remember that day. She came into the classroom and told us he had been shot. Then she came back, told us he had died, was crying, and we all went home. 5th grade for me.
MENTORS. I really don’t remember any outstanding mentors during junior high and high school. I just did my work, quietly, as a student. I liked learning, and I knew how to excel on tests.
Mentors in College. First of all, I finished college at the age of 42, my Bachelors. Then I just kept going, got my Masters and then PhD by age 55. It was all very difficult and challenging. That’s a story for another day.
MENTORS in upper-level classes include Dr. Anthony Lemelle, who opened my mind to so many things I had never studied before, including Ronald Takaki, African American history, Gay/Lesbian issues and the daily humiliation they experience, the lives of Black men in America, scholars of Critical theory (including Critical race theory), Cultural theory and non-Western thought such as Edward Said.
Women professors introduced me to Intersectionality, Feminist thought and theory, and Black feminist thought, Drs. Patricia Boling, Sandra Barnes, Rachel Einwohner, Siobhan Summerville.
Others taught me more about Critical and Marxist thought, Dr. Kevin Anderson, Dr. Leonard Harris.
My major professor, Dr. Jack Spencer taught me about micro-theory, Erving Goffman, Grounded theory (which is actually a method), how to look at everyday life and see insights into larger social issues. The rest of the people on my committee I never related to well. They were there to assist, but their own bickering with each other nearly killed me and my studies.
Through it all, Graduate school is pretty much hell. It took me away from my family, it consumed my life. I made it. Looking back, what I learned was worth it. The rest of it, even the jobs afterward, I don’t think were really worth it. The only way it was all worth it was that hardship, the torment of self-doubt, being ridiculed, having to study as if your life literally depended upon it, all the HELL that it brings, teaches you something about yourself, how far you are willing to and ABLE to go, in order to get through something. It teaches you your own strength. And gives you a compassion and understanding of what others are going through, which they may not show or talk about outwardly.
My subsequent career has taught me that you never know what’s coming around the next corner. It taught me you can do your BEST, do a great job, and people will judge you wrongly. Because of rumors, accusations that are not true, or just because they want to, and they can.
Secondly, as I kept going it taught me that I have the ability to land on my feet, to always step to the next stage in life and do well. It taught me that God truly is with me, is with us all. We are only responsible for what we can, ourselves, control. We cannot sometimes control how others will judge us, and that is their responsibility, their mistake, and if you will, their loss. I also learned that I have limits. And if administrations never hear you, after many tries, they never will. It is your choice to stay or go. You are never forced into anything. Take responsibility and make a choice for your life.
At this point, I am at a new stage of trying to give what I can the best I can, to students I now have. So I am off on tangents but thinking through what all I have learned through this journey to and through Academia. Who were my mentors took me into this discussion. And that is only Chapter 1.