The true teacher accepts all students
Prof/ Walid El-gohary
A teacher says: "I can accept my good students,
those who behave and do good work, but I can't accept those who do not work,
who have the wrong attitude and who cause me trouble." They forget that
it's the acceptance of all that gives power to the teacher. In fact, it is in
relation to students who are difficult that the teacher's true qualities are
demonstrated. We all find it easy to accept those who lend themselves to our
designs. It is in their relationship to those who cause them trouble, who are
dirty and poorly dressed, and who fail to achieve that teachers prove their
beliefs.
It is the essence of the point of view here presented that only a
complete gift of oneself makes the teacher an artist. Teaching is a jealous
profession; it is not a sideline. This is not only because of the problem of
time, nor because of the impact of lesser efforts on pupils: it is because of
the effect on the teacher himself. It is only as we give fully of ourselves
that we can become our best selves. Thus halfway measures and attitudes of
whatever kind reduce our effectiveness.
When we ask the teacher to give himself fully to his students, to his
colleagues, to his community, and to humanity, we are thus only asking him to
be maximally effective. Moreover, it is only as he gives himself that he can
experience completely the joys and satisfactions of being a teacher. In this
situation he is in the same position as any artist. Frustrated artists are
often those who for one reason or another are unable or unwilling to make a
complete gift of themselves to their art. Similarly, the unhappiest teachers are
those who bemoan the weaknesses of their pupils and the conditions under which
they work and who fail to sense that it is their own half-hearted efforts that
defraud them.
One measure of the teacher's willingness to give of himself is his
accessibility to his students, his willingness to spend time with them. One
difficulty here is the narrow conception that often prevails about what it
means to teach. To teach means more than to lecture or explain before a group
of students. The best teachers influence their students more in their personal,
individual contacts with them than in strict classroom situations. If teaching
and learning are complementary processes, if the teacher is to teach by
learning and if his teaching is to be directed toward an individual, he must
know that individual. And how is he to know that individual if he spends little
or no time with him alone?
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