Educational Psychology

(Chris Devlin) #1
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1. The changing teaching profession and you.............................................................................


A teacher named Ashley reflects: She looked around the classroom, enjoying a blessed moment of
quiet after the students left at the end of the day. “Ashley, the teacher, that’s me”, she said proudly to
the empty room. “But why am I doing this?” she asked herself quietly—and realized she wasn’t
always sure of the answer. But then she remembered one reason: she was teaching for Nadia, who
sat at the table to the left, always smiled so well and always (well, usually) tried hard. And another
reason: she was teaching for Lincoln, tired old Lincoln, who needed her help more than he realized.
She remembered twenty other reasons—twenty other students. And one last reason: she was also
teaching for herself, challenging herself to see if she really could keep up with twenty-two young
people at once, and really accomplish something worthwhile with them. She was teaching so she
could keep growing as a person, keep connecting with others, keep learning new ideas. That’s why
she was teaching.

The joys of teaching..........................................................................................................................................


Why be a teacher? The short answer is easy:


  • to witness the diversity of growth in young people, and their joy in learning

  • to encourage lifelong learning—both for yourself and for others

  • to experience the challenge of devising and doing interesting, exciting activities for the young
    There is, of course, more than this to be said about the value of teaching. Consider, for instance, the “young
    people” referred to above. In one class they could be six years old; in another they could be sixteen, or even older.
    They could be rich, poor, or somewhere in between. They could come from any ethnic background. Their first
    language could be English, or something else. There are all sorts of possibilities. But whoever the particular
    students are, they will have potential as human beings: talents and personal qualities—possibly not yet realized—
    that can contribute to society, whether as leaders, experts, or supporters of others. A teacher's job—in fact a
    teacher's privilege—is to help particular “young people” to realize their potential.


Another teacher reflects: Nathan paused for a deep breath before speaking to me. “It’s not like I
expected it to be,” he said. “I’ve got five kids who speak English as a second language. I didn’t expect
that. I’ve got two, maybe three, with reading disabilities, and one of them has a part-time aide. I’ve
had to learn more about using computers than I ever expected—they’re a lot of curriculum materials
online now, and the computers help the kids that need more practice or who finish activities early.
I’m doing more screening and testing of kids than I expected, and it all takes time away from
teaching.

Educational Psychology 8 A Global Text

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