Teaching provides the ideal way
for an adult to measure his or her own growth as a human being. It’s important
to remember that learning is a process that involves, at the same time, both
the students and their teachers. In a real sense, the classroom is a laboratory
in which over a period of time you get to measure your own growth as a person as well as
that of your students. “Am I patient enough? How well do I control my temper?
Do I become too defensive at times?” These are just a few of the questions that
teachers have a chance to ask themselves every single day of the school year.
One of the
first things you learn is that young people know how to push all the
right buttons. (Or is it the wrong buttons?) In fact, students are as quick to
expose the weak spots in a teacher’s defenses as the Trojans were adept at
piercing the heel of Achilles with their arrows. That’s just an old English
teacher’s way of saying that students constantly provide their teachers with
grist for the mill for the unfolding of their own personal growth.
* * * * *
Might this be an area in which the literature can play an important
role for the teachers as well as the students?
Yes. The books that we read with
our students can also serve as a barometer to measure the personal growth of
the teacher. When I was a teenager, Catcher in the Rye
was clearly my favorite book, the first novel I ever read in which I felt that
the author was speaking directly to me in my own language. “You’re right,
Holden!” I wanted to shout. “There are too many phonies in
the world!” But
over time I found myself looking
at Holden in an
entirely different light. When I
reread the novel with my students many
years later, the literary character whom I had so admired as a teenager had
been transformed into a
self-absorbed preppie misfit unable to see beyond his own
narcissistic vision of the world. Now all I felt like saying was, “Grow up,
Holden! Get a life!” It was obvious that
over the years one of us had clearly evolved in our way of looking at the real
world.
* * * * *
That sounds like a good reason for a person to reread some of the
same books over the course of a lifetime. It’s like the before and after, first
viewing the world through the eyes of a child and then revisiting it years
later from the perspective of an adult.
Teachers need
to be willing to take an honest look at themselves. After all, nobody’s
perfect. For one thing, they need to be truthful about the ways in which they
deal with their anger. Do I let it build up until it
explodes in a
single outburst? Or do
I express my feelings of
anger as they occur along the way? It’s not
a question of
having to rush
out and see a
shrink, either. (Although that can be helpful, too!)
The point is that the more we know about our own selves, the more insight we
are able to provide into the lives of our students in order to assist them in
their growth as human beings. Carl Jung, the Swiss psychologist, once said, “If
there is anything that we wish to change in the child, we should first examine
it and see whether it is
something that could
better be changed in ourselves.”