Folks:
The posting below looks a some qualities that make a good teacher.
It is from a list of ten such qualities appearing in Chapter 1:What
Makes a Good Teacher?, by Peter C. Beidler in Inspiring Teaching,
Carnegie Professors of the Year Speak, John K. Roth General Editor.
Anker Publishing Company, Inc., Bolton, MA. Copyright © 1997
by Anker Publishing Company, Inc. All rights reserved. ISBN 1-882982-13-4
Anker Publishing Company, Inc. 176 Ballville Road P.O. Box 249
Bolton, MA 1-882982-14-2. [www.ankerpub.com] Reprinted with permission.
Regards,
Rick Reis
reis@stanford.edu
UP NEXT: Preparing Doctoral Students for Faculty Careers That
Contribute to the Public Good
Tomorrow's Teaching and Learning
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WHAT MAKES A GOOD TEACHER?
In this essay I want to talk about ten of the qualities that
make a good teacher. My method is absolutely unscientific. Readers
who want to know what exerts say about good teaching should stop
reading right now and open to a different page of Inspiring Teaching.
Readers who want to know what Pete has noticed about good teaching
are welcome to read on. My evidence is personal, memorial, observational,
and narrow. I have known teachers in Indiana, Pennsylvania, Arizona,
Texas, England, and China. Like Henry David Thoreau, I refuse
to apologize for writing so much about myself. There is, simply,
no one else I know as well. My hope is that my readers will be
inspired to think far less about what I have noticed makes a good
teacher than about what they themselves have noticed.
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NOTE: Abbreviated list chosen by Rick Reis. If you would like
an electronic copy of all ten qualities described by Beidler just
send an email to reis@stanford.edu]
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1. Good Teachers Really Want to Be Good Teachers
Good teachers try and try and try, and let students know they
try. Just as we respect students who really try, even if they
do not succeed in everything they do, so they will respect us,
even if we are not as good as we want to be. And just as we will
do almost anything to help a student who really wants to succeed,
so they will help us to be good teachers if they sense that we
are sincere in our efforts to succeed at teaching. Some things
teachers can fake. Some things teachers must fake. We have, for
example, to act our way into letting our students know that we
can't think of any place we would rather be at 8:10 on a Friday
morning than in a class with them talking about the difference
between a comma splice and a run-on sentence. An acting course
is a good preparation for a life in the classroom because it shows
us how to pretend. Our students probably know on some level that
we would rather be across the street sipping a cup of Starbucks
coffee than caged up with!
24 paste-faced first years who count on our joyous enthusiasm
and enlivening wit to be the cup of Starbucks that will get them
ready for their 9:10 class. But they will forgive our chicanery,
even if they suspect that we are faking our joy. They will know
it by the second day, however, if we don't really want to be good
teachers, and they will have trouble forgiving us for that. Wanting-really,
truly, honestly wanting-to be a good teacher is being already
more than halfway home.
2. Good Teachers Take Risks
They set themselves impossible goals, and then scramble to achieve
them. If what they want to do is not quite the way it is usually
done, they will risk doing it anyhow. Students like it when we
take risks. One of my own favorite courses was a first-year writing
course in which I ordered no writing textbook for the course.
On the first day I announced, instead, that my students and I
were going to spend a semester writing a short textbook on writing.
It was, I said, to be an entirely upside-down course in which
the students would write lots of essays, decide as a group which
ones were best, and then try to determine in discussion what qualities
the good ones had in common. Whenever we hit upon a principle
that the good essays seemed to embody and that the weak papers
did not, we would write it down. Then we eventually worked our
discovered principles into a little textbook that the students
could take home with them. It was a risky course. It was built
on a crazy no!
tion that first-year college students in a required writing course
could, first of all, tell good writing from less-good writing,
and, second, that they could articulate the principles that made
the good essays better. My students knew I was taking a risk in
setting the course up that way, but because they knew that my
risk was based on my own faith and trust in them, they wanted
me-they wanted us-to succeed.
We teachers have something called academic freedom. Too many of
us interpret that to mean the freedom from firing. I suggest that
we should interpret it rather as the freedom to take chances in
the classroom. I love taking risks. It keeps some excitement in
what is, after all, a pretty placid profession. I like to try
things that can fail. If there is no chance of failure, then success
is meaningless. It is usually easy enough to get permission to
take risks, because administrators usually like it when teachers
organize interesting and unusual activities. For some risky activities
it may be best not to ask permission, partly because the risks
that good teachers take are not really all that risky, and partly
because it is, after all, easier to get forgiveness than to get
permission. Teachers who regularly take risks usually succeed,
and the more they succeed the more they are permitted-even expected-to
take risks the next time. Taking risks gives teachers a high tha!
t is healthy for them and their students. It makes good teaching,
good learning.
4. Good Teachers Never Have Enough Time
Just about all of the good teachers I have known are eternally
busy. They work 80-100 hour weeks, including both Saturdays and
Sundays. Their spouses and families complain, with good reason,
that they rarely see them. The reward for all this busy-ness is
more busy-ness. The good teachers draw the most students, get
the most requests for letters of recommendation, work most diligently
at grading papers, give the most office hours and are most frequently
visited during those office hours, are most in demand for committee
work, work hardest at class preparations, work hardest at learning
their students' names, take the time to give students counsel
in areas that have nothing to do with specific courses, are most
involved in professional activities off campus.
For good teachers the day is never done. While it does not follow
that any teacher who keeps busy is a good teacher, the good teachers
I know rarely have time to relax. The good teachers I know find
that they are as busy teaching two courses as teaching three.
They know that they do a much better job with the two courses
than the three because they give more time to the individual students,
but they also know that for a responsible teacher the work of
good teaching expands to fill every moment they can give to it.
They might well complain about how busy they are, but they rarely
complain, partly because they don't want to take the time to,
partly because they don't like whining. Actually, they seem rather
to like being busy. To put it more accurately, they like helping
students-singular and plural-and have not found many workable
shortcuts to doing so.
7. Good Teachers Try to Keep Students-And Themselves-Off Balance
I have learned that when I am comfortable, complacent, and sure
of myself I am not learning anything. The only time I learn something
is when my comfort, my complacence, and my self-assurance are
threatened. Part of my own strategy for getting through life,
then, has been to keep myself, as much as possible, off balance.
I loved being a student, but being a student meant walking into
jungles where I was not sure my compass worked and didn't know
where the trails might lead or where the tigers lurked. I grew
to like that temporary danger. I try to inject some danger into
my own courses, if only to keep myself off balance. When I feel
comfortable with a course and can predict how it will come out,
I get bored; and when I get bored, I am boring. I try, then, to
do all I can to keep myself learning more. I do that in part by
putting myself in threatening situations.
A couple of decades ago, I developed a new teaching area-an area
I had never had a course in when I was a student: Native American
literature. It would have been more comfortable for me to continue
with the old stuff I knew, but part of what I knew is that I detest
stagnation. I rashly offered the department's curriculum committee
a new course. When they rashly accepted it, I was off balance,
challenged by a new task in a new area. I now teach and publish
in Native American literature regularly.
In 1988 I began to feel that I was growing complacent teaching
the privileged students I have always taught at Lehigh University-mostly
the children of upper middle class white families. It was getting
too comfortable, too predictable. I applied for a Fulbright grant
to teach for a year in the People's Republic of China. When the
appointment came through, I was scared, but I signed the papers
and not long after went with my wife and four teenaged children
to Chengdu in Sichuan Province to take up the teaching of writing
and American literature to Chinese graduate students. I have never
felt so unbalanced in my life-teaching students who could just
barely understand me, even when I was not talking "too fast."
It was a challenge to teach such students to read the literature
of a nation most of them had been taught to hate and to write
papers in a language that was alien to them. And that was only
part of the unbalance. The rest was riding my bicycle through
streets the !
names of which I could not read, eating with chopsticks food that
was almost always unrecognizable and often untranslatable because
nothing quite like it grew in my native land. Never have I felt
so unbalanced for so long a time, but never have I learned so
much in so short a time.
I have noticed that good teachers try to keep their students off
balance, forcing them to step into challenges that they are not
at all sure they can handle. Good teachers push and challenge
their students, jerking them into places where they feel uncomfortable,
where they don't know enough, where they cannot slide by on past
knowledge or techniques. Good teachers, as soon as their students
have mastered something, push their best students well past the
edge of their comfort zone, striving to make them uncomfortable,
to challenge their confidence so they can earn a new confidence.
9. Good Teachers Do Not Trust Student Evaluations
Neither do bad teachers. But there is a difference in their reasons
for distrusting them. I have noticed that good teachers, when
they get really good evaluations, don't quite believe them. They
focus instead on the one or two erratic evaluations that say something
bad about them. They good teachers tend to trust only the negative
evaluations: "I wonder what I did wrong. I suppose I went
too fast, or perhaps I should have scheduled in another required
conference after that second test. I wish I could apologize to
them, or at least find out more about what I did wrong."
The not-so-good teachers also do not trust student evaluations,
but they distrust them for difference reasons. They tend to trust
the positive evaluations but not the negative ones: "Those
good evaluations are proof that I succeeded, that my methods and
pace were just about right for these students. The others just
fell behind because they were lazy, because they never bothered
to read the book or stu!
dy for the exams. Naturally they did not like my course because
they put nothing into it. Besides, how can students judge good
teaching, and anyhow, what do they know? Anyone can get good student
evaluations by lowering their standards, being popular, and by
pandering to the masses." Good teachers tend to discount
the positive evaluations, however numerous they may be; less-good
teachers tend to discount the negative evaluations, however numerous
they may be.
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