From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Laura Creighton Message-Id: <200106130837.KAA06847@boris.cd.chalmers.se> To: 9fans@cse.psu.edu Cc: lac@cd.chalmers.se Subject: [9fans] passionate about research or about teaching Date: Wed, 13 Jun 2001 10:37:56 +0200 Topicbox-Message-UUID: b7cb2ab2-eac9-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 Some people manage to be both. I am solidly more a researcher, indeed I worry if I should be let around students at all. On the other hand, the truly odd ducks were the ones that taught me the most in my life, so perhaps a bit of me is a fine idea. My mother, on the other hand, is in my admittedly biased opinion, the single best teacher of 10-18 year olds on the planet. And the students agree. One year, a school she was at which had 9 second form classes allowed, for some reason, the students to select which teacher to have. and of roughly 270 students, 245 or so wanted my mother. This was a complete revelation to her, and so they had a special meeting where they put her int he auditorium with all the students and she asked them ``why?'' ``why did they want _her_''. And aside from the people who said, `my brother had you as a teacher and he said you were the best teacher he ever had' and the like, there were 2 answers. The first is that my mother is resoundingly authentic. There is absolutely no pretense and phoniness with her, and the students have an unfailing ear for the phoney. So they said things like `you might be wrong, but we know that you won't be lying.' and `you said that you were wrong yesterday once.' and things like that which I gather are novel things in their experience. The other thing that she does is treat students with respect. I think the expression `you have to earn respect around here' is one of the all time evil sentences on the planet. My mother's students were willing to move heaven and earth for her, and even do the more difficult task of thinking about their homeworks, because of little things like `saying excuse me when she bumped into them in the hall' and `you held the door open for me when I was carrying a lot of books once' and `you never once cut in front of me in the cafeteria line.' My experience, like hers, is that if you consistently treat people with respect, NOT toadying, but genuine respect, they immediately try to shape up into the sort of people that are worthy of respect. At any rate, having founders of a start up company who start meetings with things like `I apologize that my disgraceful preoccupation with private matters has caused all of you to lose 15 minutes of valuable time this morning' has helped make people who really think that their time should be spend doing something valuable. This trick may only work in Sweden, and Japan, and other places where individualism is not the order of the day. When I was last in the USA I took a good look at the youth, and while they appeared to have many problems, inappropriate humility, and over-concern for the face and the feelings of their fool elders did not appear to be prominent among them. I must go to a meeting or I will have to say that AGAIN Laura