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January 31, 2008

Real talk.

In one of MY classes (that is, not a class I'm teaching), a few of my colleagues/fellow teachers were talking about the movie Half Nelson with Ryan Gosling. They're thinking about using the movie as a means to help get at/understand various ideas swirling around critical pedagogy and all related methodology within this tradition.

However, even though this movie has been on my netflix queue for over a year, I still have not found the strength to ever let it reach the number one spot (thus sending it to me). I guess that's a complicated way of saying I haven't seen it.

I only have a general idea what it's about. It's about an idealistic young teacher who has problems in his own personal life. At some point, he finds it hard to separate the personal from the professional, and in this some barrier between him and his student(s) breaks down.

I'm assuming, since this is Hollywood, that somehow the teacher in the film finds salvation and consequently becomes a mythic hero figure.

I think this is why I've subconsciously been avoiding this movie. I don't want to see a screen representation of the teacher as a heroic figure. It frightens me. And the reason it frightens me is that teaching, to me, is not a heroic act at all. When I walk in a classroom, I don't feel like a hero. Instead, I feel a sense of tremendous humility and frailty. I feel exposed; and, consequently, I feel human.

Freire and bell hooks, among others, talk of "love" when they talk of teaching. This seems appropriate. The risks of teaching are the risks of love. Each day you have to put the fact that you care on the line, as others (both inside and outside the classroom) sometimes try to take advantage of that, drag you through the mud, and disrespect the humanness of the teacher that is often times taken for granted. We're not machines, we're feeling beings, too.

Of course, as with other forms of love, you love in spite of the risks. You get up with the dirt and grass still in your teeth and smile and ask for more. Maybe that's masochistic. I don't know. Maybe it explains why so many teachers, professors, instructors lead horrifically tormented lives that sometimes over take them. Again, I don't know.

Rarely there are Hollywood endings. As soon as you think you've made a break through, reached some sort of pedagogical salvation, new students come in who question your abilities, your credentials, your worth as a human being. You're not a human being to many, you're simply someone sent in to follow through on the predetermined rules of the game. They roll their eyes, administration never trusts you to do as you believe, and parents never think you're doing enough. Heroes? No.

For some of us, it's enough to know that somewhere something is happening out there. Sometimes we hear of it, many times years after the fact in a coffee shop, from a letter, a chance encounter outside of a lecture hall. Sometimes we'll hear those words that makes it worth it: "that class" and "changed me." It doesn't have to be big, but enough to know that somewhere something, even a minuscule realization, changed someone for the better and you were half of the cause.

But that's not a Hollywood ending. That's love in the real world. And there are times when it sits on the cold steel of a razor.

November 13, 2006

Mid-Semester Doldrums

Has it really been that long since I've updated? I guess it has.

Keeping a blog current and up to date has been difficult since the semester started. I think part of it has to do with the fact that during the summer, I just don't have as much of an outlet in colleagues as I do during the year. During the summer, I'm itching to get ideas out into the world and this blog becomes a repository for it. During the school year, I'm surrounded by colleagues to bounce ideas off of. This takes away the drive to really keep this blog going.

Its a bad excuse, I know. But it is the only one I have.

But a couple things of interest to note (and hopefully this means more time is starting to open up for this blog...)

I have begun planning my classes for next semester, and as an interesting experiement, I'm using a blog to track my thought processes in designing a class.

You can read all about it over HERE

Also...

Things this semester are going well so far. Instead of doing weekly updates (which fell WAY behind...and this is partially not to give away things to students while things were in progress)...I'm beginning to prep for a larger end of semester lessons learned sort of thing. I have a feeling I might work on a few sample syllabii and assignment sort of things that I'll probably share. This semester has been far from perfect, but a lot that I didn't think would work as well as it has...has. That has been encouraging. I know for a fact that I'm having much more fun teaching this semester than nearly everyone else in the department.

I wish I had a substantive essay to write here...but frankly, all that effort has been going into this research I've been doing on creative writing exercises and composition processes. Maybe parts of that will work its way on to here, too.

I really am wanting to breath some life back into this. Soon. Bear with me. Such is the life in academia it seems.

July 26, 2006

Real quick thoughts on Freire, and other stuff...

The question of "can writing be taught," and "should writing be taught" used to be the two biggest questions in my mind.

But now, as I think more and more about Freire...I wonder...are these questions valid questions to begin with?

The idea that writing will be "taught" to someone implies some sort of transfer of knowledge, not a creation of knowledge.

And the transfer of knowledge involves a power dynamic...a power dynamic that is oppressive in nature. Oppressive because it is built upon the idea that instructors hold the correct, or true version of knowledge and it is their task to implant it into the minds of the students. But this is not asking the students to think for themselves. It is forcing them to rely on the information of others...a learned helplessness if you will. All too often I have heard the phrase "i want to learn what to do when I write..." even from graduate students. What about students thinking for themselves.

and I wonder...


Is that what we really wish to do to our artists?

Perhaps this means the question goes back to the idea that writing cannot be taught, but must be learned. But how?