|
Most of us would willingly - perhaps even
passionately - tackle the question of what we should teach our
students. Similarly, we are likely to engage in a conversation about
how we teach and our preferences for organizing classroom time
and structures. Although the question of
why we teach may be raised less often (and perhaps with a hint of sarcasm), this
too is a question to which most can offer a thoughtful response.
An entirely different matter, however, is the question of
who is the person teaching. This who involves the inner realms
of one's heart, mind, and soul. How does our identity affect
the teaching and learning processes? As we teach, what paths
are we following intellectually, emotionally, or even
spiritually? How do these paths influence our relationship to our
content and to our students? With an engaging honesty, Parker
Palmer pursues these questions in The Courage to Teach:
Exploring the Inner Landscape of A Teacher's
Life. At the outset he points out (p 4):
I have no quarrel with the what or how or why
questions - except when they are posed as the only
questions worth asking. All of them can yield important
insights into teaching and learning. But none of them opens
up the territory I want to explore in this book: the
inner landscape of the teaching self.
One might well question why those of us teaching
chemistry should be interested in examining ourselves as part
of the teaching equation. Isn't scientific knowledge supposed
to be as objective as we can make it? Isn't it better for us to
check our emotional or intellectual baggage at the classroom
door, rather than to taint the content with our biases? Or
perhaps more directly stated, is it not more practical and a better
use of our time to simply deal with the realities of the
day-to-day classroom issues? Admittedly these are fair
questions. However, to become stuck on them is to miss the
opportunities for reflection and growth as teachers that Palmer's
book offers. Simply put, people teach. Without putting the
human factor into the teaching equation, you miss one of the
key variables.
In the early chapters, Palmer offers the readers
simple statements to entice them to delve more deeply into his
later discussions. "Good teaching cannot be reduced to
technique; good teaching comes from the identity and integrity of
the teacher," or, "Bad teachers distance themselves from the
subject they are teaching - and in the process, from their
students," or ultimately, "Only one resource is at my immediate
command: my identity, my selfhood, my sense of this 'I'
who teaches - without which I have no sense of the 'Thou'
who learns." Readers can expect to find both ideas and a
personal honesty on Palmer's part that inspires one to accept
human limitations and evokes a gentle chuckle at our good
days...and at our bad ones as well.
Palmer has strong credentials to write about the self
as teacher. In recent years, he has been a visiting faculty
member at Beloit College, Berea College, and Georgetown
University. Over past few decades, he has written extensively on
the teaching and learning process, including To Know as We
Are Known: Education as a Spiritual Journey (1983). He holds
a Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley and
has lived and taught in a variety of settings and
communities around the globe.
Woven through his writings is a sense of both the
human and the spiritual dimensions of being a teacher. Thus,
those who most might appreciate his reflections are
comfortable with language drawn from spiritual traditions. Palmer
spent a number of years as teacher and writer-in-residence at
Pendle Hill, a Quaker community in Pennsylvania, and the
respect and appreciation that he holds for silence and reflection
come through in his writing. Expect to find no religious dogma
or prescriptions in what he offers.
What might those of us who teach chemistry expect
to gain from this book? One possibility offered at the start
is his examination of fear as a part of human nature that
affects our teaching. Chapter 3 is entitled "A Culture of
Fear: Education and the Disconnected Life". He admits his
own anxieties and their consequences (p 29):
Driven by my fear, ...I strive to make my on-stage
performance slicker and smoother - and in the process
make it less and less likely that my students will learn
anything other than how to cover up and show off. I conceal
my own fear and am unable to weave the fabric of
connectedness that teaching and learning require.
He poses to the reader the question of how we can
transcend fear and reconnect with reality for the sake of teaching
and learning. As we train our teaching staff members and
future chemistry teachers, both directly (by what we say) and
indirectly (by who we are), a discussion of this fear within might
set the tone for more honest dialogue about ourselves as
teachers.
Another possibility is his discussion of the concept
of paradox in teaching in learning. In Chapter 6, entitled
"The Hidden Wholeness: Paradox in Teaching and Learning",
he notes that our tendency to categorize and divide can
have severe consequences. For example, we separate head
from heart, facts from feelings, theory from practice, and
teaching from learning. As a result, we may produce "minds that
do not know how to feel and hearts that do not know how
to think" or "teachers who talk but do not listen and
students who listen but do not talk."
Quoting Niels Bohr, he points out "the opposite of a
true statement is a false statement, but the opposite of a
profound truth can be another profound truth." Palmer explains (p 66):
Paradoxical thinking requires that we embrace a view
of the world in which opposites are joined, so that we
can see the world clearly and see it whole. ...The result is
a world more complex and confusing than the one
made simplistic by either/or thought - but that simplicity
is merely the dullness of death. When we think
things together, we reclaim the life force in the world, in
our students, in ourselves.
As we teach our courses, we might similarly reflect
on the consequences of the categories we use. For example,
in using the categories majors and non-majors, we may not be recognizing the
strengths that both bring. In viewing
science as distinct from other fields, we may lose the real-world
connections of science to society. And in focusing on
finding "the answer" to textbook and exam questions, we may
miss the possibility of there being several (or no) possible answers.
In the final chapters, Palmer writes about
community and what we can gain by both teaching in community
and learning from our colleagues in community. In regard to
the latter, he notes the "privatization" of what we do, that is,
our tendency to teach solo and out of collegial sight. As a
result, we have little or no shared experience related to our
teaching and therefore don't tend to speak with our colleagues
about what happened or needs to happen next. He points out
(p 144) that
When any function is privatized, the most likely
outcome is that people will perform it conservatively, refusing
to stray far from the silent consensus on what
"works"even when it clearly does not.
In Palmer's opinion, teaching at the college level has
evolved slowly because of its privatization. If we were to engage
in "good talk about good teaching", this would "enhance both
our professional practice and the selfhood from which it
comes." He views these conversations as a "professional
obligation" that we should expect of ourselves and of others. In
these chapters, the reader will find practical suggestions for how
a more public discourse about teaching could be accomplished.
As one might guess, I have been a fan of Palmer's
books over the years. His writings have withstood the test of
time and continue to offer thoughtful reflections to any
interested in the art of teaching in its many dimensions. As might
be expected, my copy of this book has had no time to
gather dust on my shelf, as it keeps making the rounds. If by
now somebody hasn't loaned you a copy of The Courage to
Teach, you might want to get your own. More likely than not,
there will be a hole in your bookshelf where it belongs.
|