The Hardest Job Everyone Thinks They Can Do
By
Dennis Hong Posted on weblog
musingsonlifeandlove.com September 13, 2010
musingsonlifeandlove.com September 13, 2010
This
piece was inspired by a heated discussion I had with a man who believes that
teachers have an easy job. Please feel free to share it with others if you
agree with the message.
Acquaintances
would sigh sympathetically. And they’d say, “I know you’ll figure it out. I
have faith in you.”
And
then, they’d tilt their heads in a show of respect for my skills….
Today,
I’m a high school teacher. I spend my days culturing teenagers. Sometimes, my
students get disruptive, and I swear to myself in frustration. Acquaintances
ask me how my work is going. I explain how I’m having a difficult time with a
certain kid. I can’t seem to get him to pay attention in class.
Acquaintances
smirk knowingly. And they say, “well, have you tried making it fun for the
kids? That’s how you get through to them, you know?”
And
then, they explain to me how I should do my job….
I
realize now how little respect teachers get. Teaching is the toughest job
everyone who’s never done it thinks they can do. I admit, I was guilty of these
delusions myself. When I decided to make the switch from “doing” science to
“teaching” science, I found out that I had to go back to school to get a
teaching credential.
“What?,”
I screamed to any friends willing to put up with my griping. “I have a Ph.D.! Why do I need to go back to get a lousy
teaching credential?!?”
I
was baffled. How could I, with my advanced degree in biology, not be qualified
to teach biology?!
Well,
those school administrators were a stubborn bunch. I simply couldn’t get a job
without a credential. And so, I begrudgingly enrolled in a secondary teaching
credential program.
And
boy, were my eyes opened. I understand now.
Teaching
isn’t just “making it fun” for the kids. Teaching isn’t just academic content.
Teaching
is understanding how the human brain processes information and preparing
lessons with this understanding in mind.
Teaching
is simultaneously instilling in a child the belief that she can accomplish
anything she wants while admonishing her for producing shoddy work.
Teaching
is understanding the psychology and physiology behind the changes the
adolescent mind goes through.
Teaching
is convincing a defiant teenager that the work he sees no value in does serve a
greater purpose in preparing him for the rest of his life.
Teaching
is offering a sympathetic ear while maintaining a stern voice.
Teaching
is being both a role model and a mentor to someone who may have neither at
home, and may not be looking for either.
Teaching
is not easy. Teaching is not intuitive. Teaching is not something that anyone
can figure out on his own. Education researchers spend lifetimes developing
effective new teaching methods. Teaching takes hard work and constant training.
I understand now.
Have
you ever watched professional athletes and gawked at how easy they make it
look? Kobe Bryant weaves through five opposing players, sinking the ball into
the basket without even glancing in its direction. Brett Favre spirals a
football 100 feet through the air, landing it in the arms of a teammate running
at full speed. Does anyone have any delusions that they can do what Kobe and
Brett do?
Yet,
people have delusions that anyone can do what the typical teacher does on a
typical day.
Maybe
the problem is tangibility. Shooting a basketball isn’t easy, but it’s easy to
measure how good someone is at shooting a basketball. Throwing a football isn’t
easy, but it’s easy to measure how good someone is at throwing a football.
Similarly, diagnosing illnesses isn’t easy to do, but it’s easy to measure.
Winning court cases isn’t easy to do, but it’s easy to measure. Creating and
designing technology isn’t easy to do, but it’s easy to measure.
Inspiring
kids? Inspiring kids can be downright damned near close to impossible
sometimes. And… it’s downright damned near close to impossible to measure. You
can’t measure inspiration by a child’s test scores. You can’t measure
inspiration by a child’s grades. You measure inspiration 25 years later when
that hot-shot doctor, or lawyer, or entrepreneur thanks her fourth-grade teacher
for having faith in her and encouraging her to pursue her dreams.
Maybe
that’s why teachers get so little respect. It’s hard to respect a skill that is
so hard to quantify.
So,
maybe you just have to take our word for it. The next time you walk into a classroom,
and you see the teacher calmly presiding over a room full of kids, all actively
engaged in the lesson, realize that it’s not because the job is easy. It’s
because we make it look easy. And because we work our asses off to make it look
easy.
And,
yes, we make it fun, too.
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