As I look back on the blog, I seem to have focused on sharing
success stories. Well, on the one
hand, naturally. Who would wanna dig herself into the memory of failures? (Actually,
many people – the little voice cries out in my head. :-) While it is OK not to recite one’s misdemeanors and
disappointments over and over again, it is necessary to face them every once in
a while. Because, ultimately, they are there to teach us. So, let’s see my Top 3 Failures in Education.
ever
tried. ever failed.
Number 3 failure story was set in a business English class
of a group with a relatively high level of language competence. During the
lessons, we watched TED talks, had extensive discussions, and gave
presentations on various topics, from serious to fun ones. Since they liked short
videos and authentic English, I decided, before that notorious class, to bring
some excerpts from the well-known pop series Friends. Not only did I include some videos, the class was closely
built on those short conversations we were supposed to watch. Friends had proved to be a hit in every
previous context I used it, until this one. It was not only that almost no one
had known the series and the characters (which I expected they would), but they
couldn’t even follow the 2-3-minute conversations. And, as I said, all the
activities were based on this. I don’t need to go into details: the class was wasted.
And I cannot even say that it had to be a total surprise.
They were in their 30s-40s, that is, not the ideal age group for sitcoms, and it
was obvious from previous experiences that they were not too up-to-date in pop
culture either. If not to expect it, I could have at least considered the
option of a plan B.
no
matter. try again.
Number 2 was more (socially) devastating. As part of my
teacher training, I had to teach English in a model high school for a couple of
months. These 16-year-olds were my very first group and they mesmerized me
completely. I still remember how shocked I was to see that my students always listened
and did what I asked them (too bad reality is rarely like this, at least in
high school contexts). We had a nice routine worked out: some grammar, some
discussion, a variety of tasks, and … every fourth class some oral comprehension,
in the frames of watching an episode of the series they had chosen, How I Met Your Mother. I didn’t
particularly like HIMYM but they apparently did, which is what mattered.
Our last class was approaching, which was both my exam
class and our farewell, so I wanted to prepare with something special. You
know, something memorable. (How naive I was!) It was time for HIMYM and the
upcoming episode had a particular scene – one character in a funny apron
(having the body of Michelangelo’s David) – which I decided to bring to life. I
thought, how funny, how cool. So, when the episode was over, I slowly turned to
them, wearing the exact same apron – that is, a naked male body. They froze. It was
so shockingly surprising for them – so unexpected from me, their teacher – that they couldn’t say a word. Well, the silence
made me awfully conscious that I was standing butt-naked in front of a group of
teenagers. Our worst nightmare, isn’t it?
Again, I could have expected. Or rather, I could have
prepared them. They were too “nice students,” and I was a “too nice teacher” for
something improper to be OK, let alone, hilarious.
fail
again. fail better.
All-time-winning failure story was one of the courses I had
to teach at the university. It is one thing that I never got courses in the discipline
I specialized and did my doctoral studies in (cognitive linguistics). In a way,
I even liked it. Presentation practice, academic writing, and blog writing were
fields I felt important for all students to learn (much more than my own
specialization, which I considered relevant only for a few) and I had things
to say about them. Although I never systematically was taught about these, I
was intuitively good at them, so it was enough to read a couple of books about
them to make my knowledge more conscious and organized, ready for teaching.
Once, however, I was given a course I felt completely
unprepared for. It was a specialization course, in the second year of a
journalism program. By the time the students got to my course, they were
already heavily trained about the journalistic genres, styles, and peculiarities
of the American journalistic tradition. I, on the other hand, had no experience
and no material to pass on. This course (American English in Journalism) was
something nobody wanted to teach, nobody had an idea what and how to teach, and
it was not embedded into the program. I was left without assistance – in the hands
of a group of exceptionally self-confident and self-conscious students, who
were encouraged and comfortable about expressing expectations.
I did my best, and, looking back, it was not a worthless
course, but I can’t erase that semester-long feeling of inadequacy from my
head. It was just horrible.
What
did I learn from these experiences? That I can make mistakes and it is OK.
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