Teachers Who Inspire

inspiring-teacher-quoteI’m doing what I have always wanted to do…teach.  I have taught all grade levels from preschool to grade twelve and my journey in the classroom began way back in 1977 as a student teacher.  I can remember my practicums vividly, especially one group of grade three students who decided to sit like “Mork from Ork” in their desks, heads down on the chairs, knees on the desk tops, bottoms pointing towards me.  When I entered the classroom that morning and saw that, all I could do was sit at my desk and laugh until the tears streamed down my face!  If cell phones had been invented then I would have hastily grabbed my iPhone and posted the picture on Facebook.  I’ll bet I would have gotten a million likes!

There was also the practicum from H.E… double hockey sticks!  A teaching nightmare that almost caused me to have a nervous breakdown.  It wasn’t the fault of the students per se, but a tyrannical mentor teacher, who hated the idea of someone usurping her role (even slightly) in the classroom.  It is interesting that out of nearly one hundred and fifty student teachers that started that year with me from the University of Victoria, only fifty came back to continue in the education faculty the following year.  Practicums had a way of weeding out those who could not “cut it” in front of the classroom.

But my journey with teaching did not start after high school, but long, long before then when I was a student.  I am indeed blessed that in my lifetime, I was fortunate enough to learn the art of teaching from master-teachers!  Memorable, caring individuals who filled my head with knowledge, built on the foundation of my dreams, and encouraged me to ask questions, explore and search for answers.  Mrs. Lees in grade four, Mrs. Peterson in grade five, Mr. Songhurst and Mr. Hopwood (Gr. 6 and 7) and then in high school: Mr. Parslow, Mr. Snider, Mrs. Lidster, Mrs. Oke and Mr. Sankey (my high school principal).  However, the most sparkling gem of them all was Mr. Tom Scrase…oh, how I loved every minute spent in his classroom!  He made history come alive for me, and challenged his students to do the unheard of…write a hundred page “Depth Study” as he called it, on a World War 1 or 2 event.  We didn’t work in partners either!  I remember I spent months researching and collecting pictures and reading book after book on the Holocaust.  (This was before the internet people!  It meant going to the library and digging through books, newspapers, magazines and microfilm and collecting data that way.  Also no computers or typewriters to use to write my report.  It was all hand written!)  I wonder what students, even university students would say today about getting that kind of an assignment and being told they couldn’t use their computers or the internet to aid them?

But we did it!  Even the students who were less than stellar in the classroom handed in a completed report.  Mr. Scrase was like our coach throughout the entire process, spurring us all on so that we knew when we handed in that assignment that we had REALLY accomplished something spectacular.  I didn’t know then but I have come to learn that it wasn’t so much the contents of our individual reports that he marked us on but the EFFORT we took in doing the assignment.  He gave us a seemingly “impossible” assignment and then applauded the entire class when we did the “impossible”.  I’ll never forget it!  I will also never forget how he spent time with us, talked with us, treated us with respect and listened to us.  He spent little time in the staff room because he preferred spending lunch hours in his classroom watching “Hogan’s Heroes” reruns with his students, pointing out historical “flaws” along the way as we giggled at the comedic aspects of the show.  And on occasion, when his call to pay attention in class went unheeded, he would hurl a piece of chalk in our general direction, that would bounce off the back wall above our heads and snap us to face forward.  He called it a “warning shot” 🙂  I will never ever forget Mr. Scrase.  (I named one of the characters in my “Love the Wounded” book after that beloved teacher.  It was my way of honouring his memory!)

I model some of my teaching after Mr. Scrase, although hurling chalk is strictly verboten 🙂 I expect my students to try something that challenges them to go way beyond where they think they can go, or what they think they can do especially in writing.  Last year, I taught a creative writing class that had each of my students take on the NANOWRIMO challenge.  For those writers out there who have never taken on the National Novel Writing Month (November), it is to write 50,000 words in one month.  For those of us who have written novels, that word count is a small novella at best but for students who are in junior high, the thought of writing 500 words is a daunting task!  I challenged my students to write at least 20,000 words as their goal.  All of the students surpassed that mark with a few writing the full 50,000 words!  Again, it was not so much the story or content I applauded them on (although we spent the next several months editing and polishing the stories and learning a lot about building plot, characterizations etc. etc.) but I applauded them on accomplishing something NONE of them thought they could do: write a “novel” in a one month!  When I handed them their certificates of accomplishment, their faces beamed with delight.  I knew then how Mr. Scrase must have felt when he handed me back my Depth Study and saw the look on my face when I read his comments on the cover page: “A +++”  “A job well done!”

Yep, there’s a sermon illustration in that, I’m sure 🙂

 

 

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A Chasing After the Wind

I love the expression, “A Chasing After the Wind”!  It brings up a word picture of someone going full tilt through life chasing something that is never meant to be caught.  It is an impossibility to chase the wind.  Sure, with modern technology we can “harness” the wind by allowing it’s power to spin turbines that become an alternative energy power source, but still the wind can never be caught.  It can’t be held in your hand.  To try to grab hold of it is a totally futile attempt at best and yet many of us try to do just that.

Wise Solomon in Ecclesiastes 2 admitted that he chased after the wind.  Someone called it the “I” Factor.  Notice how many “I‘s” are in the passage: “I tried cheering myself with wine,…I undertook great projects: I built houses for myself and planted vineyards.  I made gardens and parks and planted all kinds of fruit trees in them.  I made reservoirs to water groves of flourishing trees.  I bought male and female slaves…I also owned more herds and flocks than anyone in Jerusalem before me.  I amassed silver and gold for myself…I acquired men and women singers, and a harem as well – the delights of the heart of man.  I became greater by far than anyone in Jerusalem before me…I denied myself nothing my eyes desired; I refused my heart no pleasure…” (vs. 3-10)

But listen to his words at the end of this: “Yet when I surveyed all that my hands had done and what I had toiled to achieve, everything was meaningless, a chasing after wind; nothing was gained under the sun.” (vs.11)

Solomon was “chasing after the wind” with pursuits that only would result in temporary enjoyment and short-term pleasure.  That is what is meant by “living under the sun”.  Earthly pursuits under the sun bring only temporary comfort.  We may delight in them for a short time but ultimately we must be prepared to give it all up when our earthly bodies die.

Solomon understood that…eventually.  It took him some time though.  He chased after the wind through most of his life and it cost him dearly.  He finally understood towards the end of his life that he should have focused more on living a life for God.  “Remember your Creator in the days of your youth, before the days of trouble come and the years approach when you will say, “I find no pleasure in them” (Ecclesiastes 12:1)

I remember after my Mom passed away from a two year battle with breast cancer my father and I had the unenviable task of going through her belongings.  I’ll have to write another time the crazy things my Mom saved during her lifetime but pertinent to this topic was when my Dad opened Mom’s wallet and took out all the contents and spread it on the table in front of me.  She had about thirty dollars and change, her driver’s license, several coupons, pictures of my brother and I and several credit cards.  For a few minutes my Dad just stared at it all and then he calmly went into the kitchen and came back with a scissor.  For the next few minutes he cut her credit cards to pieces.  All he said was, “She won’t be needing these anymore.”

It was true.  Mom’s life under the sun was over.  Her life with the Son had begun.

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Foot in Mouth Disease

“Ooops I did it again!” quoting Britney Spears, I stuck my foot in my mouth and said something I will likely regret for some time.  As soon as I uttered the words I KNEW I had messed up.  Unfortunately once said the words could not be taken back.  It’s not like they dropped on the floor and I could just pick them up like the “5 second rule” when you drop some food on the floor and can pop it back in your mouth with no ramifications.  Nope, the words hang in the air and then vaporize like steam into the pores of the person in front of me.  From there, they become pin-pricks of infection and spread throughout the body but linger at heart’s door.  I ask for forgiveness but I know damage has been done not only to her but to me as well.

How can I undo the hurt?

I was diagnosed with “Foot in Mouth Disease” at a very early age.  The symptoms are obvious:

  •    * Not thinking before speaking
  •    * Speaking just to hear the sound of my own voice
  •    * Inability to take back words once said
  •    * Red cheeks flushed with embarrassment
  •    * Subsequent inability to look people in the eye
  •    * Guilt

The disease unfortunately never goes away.  I live with it daily but thankfully there are some natural remedies that help prevent a particularly nasty episode of “Foot in Mouth”.

  •   Admitting I have the disease allows me to always be on guard for flare-ups!
  •   Before opening my mouth I check for signs of various “foot fungi” ie: pride, selfishness, jealousy, anger, pettiness,  impetuousness, etc.
  •   I make sure I connect with the Great Physician for regular “heart” check-ups.  There is a known link between “heart” disease and “Foot in Mouth” disease.

So, I kneel before the Father again and ask forgiveness and ask for His healing yet again, not only for me but for the one who was hurt by my words.  Squelch the tongue’s spark, Lord!

“My dear brothers, take note of this: Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry…the tongue is a small part of the body, but it makes great boasts.  Consider what a great forest is set on fire by a small spark.  The tongue also is a fire, a world of evil among the parts of the body.  It corrupts the whole person, sets the whole course of his life on fire, and is itself set on fire by hell.”  (James 1:19; James 3:5-6)

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