THOSE WHO CAN, DO; THOSE WHO CAN’T…
So, a lawyer and a teacher are at a dinner party. The lawyer is gesticulating wildly and holding court when he says the one thing that sears the ears of every teacher:
“Those who can, do. Those who can’t, teach.”
This slight unleashes the teacher into a non-stop, vein-popping rejoinder that is Taylor Mali’s Slam Nation poem?“What Teachers Make”. It went viral. A comic strip version of Taylor’s poem went viral as well. And, when it was shared with me, I almost shared it with others. But I didn’t. And, if you haven’t seen it and want to before I explain why, here you go:
Now that you’ve seen it, here’s why I didn’t share the comic:
Students are echeloned in neat and tidy rows of orderliness. All of their eyes are focused on the teacher who sits behind a desk at the front of the room. There’s a clear distinction between the one who knows and the ones who have yet to know. It is the teacher who knows.?It is the teacher who anchors the center of the room.
When students come to the teacher (they have to), he is elevated above them, towers over them. For students, knowledge, direction, answers and expectations flow in one direction — they flow from the person behind the desk at the front of the class and not those next to, across from, behind or diagonal to them.
The focus is on silence, seeking permission, and the raising of hands. The focus in on making students do things like write, read, spell, show their work and more. And, how does the teacher make his students do these things? Grades. Their motivation to work hard, harder than they ever worked before, comes from the teacher wielding his pen. Not from within and not from some historically and culturally-centered standard of excellence held by their peers.
Taylor ends his vehement rejoinder by saying “Teachers make a goddamn difference!”
Teachers make their students:
And, I say “yes” to all of these things. However, the classroom in his poem is represented as a system of control that is hierarchically structured and designed for the effective transmission of information and the issuance of orders. Now, this may be suitable for an industrialized world that is changing slowly, manageably. But that is no longer our world. And, that “goddam difference made” Taylor refers to flows from teacher to student and not in reverse. We all know that that is not true.
Now, is it unfair to ask a poem (or comic) to capture the entirety of what it means to be a teacher? Yes, of course. And, don’t get me wrong. I still enjoy the poem. But there’s more (so much more) to teaching than what it represents. Indeed, in my?Rewilding Pedagogy, I do not make my students do any of the things that are in that poem.
What do I make?
I make:
But I do not make any of these things alone. I co-make them with my students.
And, in order to do that, I had to give up:
And, by doing that, I also had to give up the:
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And, yes, sometimes, the classroom got:
And, yes, I was:
But I got to teach them about:
And, I got to teach them how to:
And, I gained:
And, I also gained:
That’s the more I am talking about.
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I’m writing a book on my pedagogy called?Rewild School, blogpost-by-blogpost. This is one of those blogposts. You can learn more by visiting?Rewild School.
Thanks. – shawn
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Photo by?Ivan Aleksic?on?Unsplash
Pizza maker
3 年https://youtu.be/37IYnip8png
attorney and educator
3 年love this- always an inspiring message from you Shawn