I am not a writer. Nor a photographer. Though I appreciate both good writing and
good photography. Sometimes inspiration
simply does not come, and yet, the deadline approaches.
This week I left the
country that has been my home for six years.
Bittersweet. My mind is, perhaps,
more focused on my tropical past than my frigid present.
I am not currently
teaching classes. I taught 3rd-4th
grades in a private school in Lansing, Michigan for 4 years. After that, we moved to Bolivia and I taught
math and music to secondary students in a jungle boarding school for six
years. I moved from the jungle to Santa Cruz
in October. I was on the verge of signing a contract to
teach at an English school when a series of events…compelling experiences, if
you will…threw
me on a fast track back to the United States.
So,
here I sit thinking about the relationship between photography and
teaching. While reading “How to Make
Great Photographs” on www.kenrockwell.com,
I particularly resonated with the idea of passion in a photograph. “Photography is the art of communicating
passion. You need to be passionate about whatever it is that you photograph. If
you are passionate you'll get great results, if you don't care, you won't.” Is it not the same with teaching? We, as educators, must all admit that there
have been days when we have been less than passionate about what we were
teaching. I remember being in my
Elementary Math Methods class during my undergraduate experience. I was in the class with about 15 or 20 other
elementary education majors. The
professor asked us how many of us liked math.
I was the only one in my class that raised her hand. The only one.
Many scowled and groaned indicating that the only reason they would even
teach math in their elementary school classrooms was because it was a
requirement. I would imagine that this
is not uncommon among the elementary education majors even today. If our elementary teachers have no passion for
math, how will they communicate a love of math to their students. And with no passion, no great results can be
expected, just like in photography.
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