"Teachers teach because they care. Teaching young people is what they do best. It requires long hours, patience, and care." Horace Mann
MORE ON CHILDHOOD MEMORIES
An early childhood trainer from India (and a member of the World Forum International
Organizing Committee), Vijaya Murthy, shared these ideas in response to the
April 22 ExchangeEveryDay, "Childhood Memories as a Training Tool"
....
"In the inservice programs I conduct, I take the teachers to their childhood
experiences and ask them to list 3 persons who have influenced them tremendously
. Then they are told to list the qualities these people possessed which impacted
them. After this first round, I ask them to list 3 teachers who have impacted
them and then list their qualities. One is often surprised that the first time
it is very rare that teachers are listed as having impacted them to such an
extent to be listed which is very sad. This issue is taken up later for discussion
as to how as teachers we can influence our students greatly but it seems to
be not happening due to wrong ways of handling perhaps.
"I then call for volunteers to share the qualities and to everyone's surprise
the qualities listed are compassionate, understanding, helpful, organised and
so on. Very rarely are the qualities like good in teaching listed. Thus they
get an insight that the most important quality of a teacher, which is cherished
by students, is sensitive, interpersonal relationships rather than cognitive
abilities. We then also probe into why did we list persons in general and not
go straight to teachers and we conclude that to be a good teacher one has to
be first a good human being than anything else. Very powerfully and automatically
the participants realise that they need to be very careful and concerned about
how they handle students.
"Another way I do this is by asking teachers to recall the experiences
they had with their teachers as children and list those which were encouraging,
enriching and empowering and those which were discouraging, demotivating and
negative. Then I ask them to extrapolate these to the present situation in the
classrooms when they are with the children. This almost shakes them up and helps
them to gain insight, understand and realise the ways they need to change or
modify their behaviour while interacting with children. During the sharing sessions
the teachers discuss the amazing breakthroughs they have had.
"Both of these workshops can be conducted with teachers from any level
of the educational system. I have been conducting them for teachers from the
preprimary to the tertiary level with equal impact. The only difference is the
introductory discussion and the examples that vary. With a little variation
it can be conducted for administrators and managers with instances of the support
and guidance they received when they started working, vis-a-vis the present
help and support they render to their people now as directors and managers.
"I agree, using childhood experiences is one of the most powerful tools
to impact the behaviour of human beings."
For additional resources on teacher training, go to www.ChildCareExchange.com.
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