TEACHING IS THE GREATEST ACT OF OPTIMISM
“Teachers can change lives with just the right mix of
chalk and challenges.”
Joyce Meyer
I see
many young students around me – mostly between the age 16 and 20 – who teach
other students. They remind me of my own early-teaching days.
I was in F.Y.
B.Com… I was weak in studies… extremely self-conscious and full of self-doubts.
I was scared of revealing myself… and, I was worried about my future. Against
such a backdrop, I remember watching my teacher, the legendary Prof. B. S.
Raman (St. Aloysius College, Mangalore) and waking up to a dream: to be a fine
teacher and writer like him (He had written every Commerce textbook). He taught
us for three years… and, without talking to him even a single word – one-on-one
– he was able to unleash that dream in me… That’s the beginning of my
self-belief, self-confidence and self-responsibility. I was so consumed by that
dream, that I found myself teaching some of my friends after the college hours…
When they said, “Gerry, you teach very well” – well, it reinforced my self-belief
and dream. I did not look back since then… I also did not do anything else – except
teaching and writing, since then…
It's going to be
nearly fifty years now… I am still teaching and writing. The only difference is
that: In those days, I did it without charging a single rupee (even though my family
desperately needed money), now, my students pay me so that I can run my family.
But, my writings – yes, I still do it for simple joy - to help myself feel
self-confident and productive in life…
Colleen Wilcox
says, “Teaching is the greatest act of optimism.” When I reflect on this half-a-century
of teaching, I am able to say, that it has been more of half-a-century of
learning for me than teaching. You see, we teach best what we actually want to
learn… And, to stay faithful and childlike, even after fifty years – not letting
fatigue, frustration, pessimism etc. rob me of the very reason why I wanted to
be a teacher - yes, it has been a very humbling learning- experience itself…
It's not just
teaching the academic subject, and it’s not just helping my students score well
in their exams. For me, the real teaching experience takes place when I am able
to ignite the self-belief, the way, unknowingly, my own teacher/s did when I
was young. If I am able to make my students think, be self-responsible and
self-confident, if I am able to help them express themselves well and get in
touch with their dreams – yes, that’s a real teaching experience for me…
Let me repeat
this: One needs to be an incorrigible optimist to stay committed to the
teaching profession… The seeds we sow soon become saplings, and soon the
saplings grow into robust trees…
And, we?
Many
of my early-years students have been sharing this beautiful video from Parle-G,
which is doing viral rounds these days. It feels good, to say with all the honesty,
and to say with all the humility. Behind every mighty tree, there had been
someone who believed in the seed and the sapling… If I remember, today, my own
teacher/s, who did it for me years ago, I am sure, my own students would
remember theirs, too…
That’s how the
world of teachers has, always, been… As Joyce Meyer says, “Teachers can change
lives with just the right mix of chalk and challenges.”
Well, less of chalk
and more of challenges, I think… looking at my own mighty trees, today...
GERALD D’CUNHA
Pic’s: Pixabay
Videoes: 1. Parle-G 2
2. Aditya Birla Group
Comments
I hope to continue learning from your example and carrying the lessons you've imparted with me throughout my life. Thank you for being an exceptional teacher, mentor, and role model.
I hope to continue learning from your example and carrying the lessons you've imparted with me throughout my life. Thank you Gerry sir for being an exceptional teacher, mentor, and role model.