Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Favorite Teachers

Do you have a favorite teacher? From elementary school? Middle/Junior High, High School? College? I ask because Mike blogs, too, and the other day he got a random e-mail from his high school AP English teacher who he hasn't seen since high school (Class of 1989!). Wow. It really got me to thinking ...

My Mom is a teacher - she's taught 1st grade since completing her degrees in Elementary Education (B.A., Limestone College, Gaffney, SC) and Divergent Learning (Masters, Columbia College, Columbia, SC) and this year is teaching 5-year old Kindergarten. This year, she's teaching the child of a former student. I could really get into the socio-economics of her school's part of our county, but I won't get started on that today. Suffice it to say that my Mom has only been teaching for about 10 years, and you get the idea.

Myself, I've been blessed in that I've had not just one good teacher, but numerous great teachers who standout in my memory.

I'll skip 1st grade as it pretty much was the worst year of my life (chicken pox, scarlet fever, and I was stuck in the middle reading group the whole year!).

But Second Grade ... second grade was WOW. I had Mrs. Banks who was amazing. I mean, even the part where she made me sit behind the classroom door because I talked too much & then I only had the wall to talk to, even that was great. She was (is) a dynamic teacher in that she laughed a lot, let us laugh a lot and had the good sense to teach to the strengths of her students. And she took us on a field trip to Clemson University so that we saw what it was like to go to college. Mrs. Banks made me love school.

Skip a few years - not because Ms. Culbreth (3rd) or Mrs. Bridges (4th) weren't great teachers because they were - but to save some time a space for Mrs. Nichols (5th).

Mrs. Nichols was (is) a wonderful, sweet teacher. She loved (still loves) her students as if if each one is hers. And she taught me about forgiveness - mine and others. When Eden and I got in to an argument, Mrs. Nochols took us out into the hall and spoke with her sweet, patient voice. And explained that we were friends, and in order to stay friends, we had to be willing to forgive each other. And she added, we should remember that if we wanted God to forgive us, we had to be willing to fogive each other. That's a lesson I need to learn over and over again.

Middle School and Junior High are a blur - the first years of having multiple teachers - but Ms. Parker (6th grade Math), Mr. Andreasen (8th grade geography), Mrs. Kimbrell (8th grade lit) ... those are the ones who standout ...

And then there was high school ...
Mrs. Smith (9th grade English), Mr. cannon (10th grade English), Mr. Smith (11th & 12th AP English), Mrs. Putnam (11th grade AP U.S. History), Coach Fisher (9th grade World Geography), Herr Hope (10th, 11th & 12th grade German). Thanks to each of these people I can not only form a coheerrant thought, I know how to write it down. Thanks to each of these people, I can not only name a United States Supreme Court decision, I know its significance. Thanks to each of these people, I can find Russia, China, the Yang Tze River, The Andes Mountains, the Nile River and many, many other countries, Rivers, Mountain Ranges, countries and all of the 50 U.S. States on a Map. And I can find a bathroom, food, a hotel, an airport, the Post, and say hello the next time I'm in Germany, or during Oktoberfest. And they did it all creatively, kindly, harshly, determinedly. I was important to each of them and I knew it. I still know it. And they are important to me.

College professors are a whole other post, so ... Thank you to teachers. They give of their time, their energy, their money and themselves. And they do it for not nearly what they should get in monetary compensation. And they get up early, when it's rainy and cold or hot and humid. Teachers are amazing ...