Since I've been hacking away at my speech this week (it has to be ten minutes long!!!), I thought I'd do myself a favor and double dip here on my blog. So, if you'd like to read some sappy inspiration, I share with you my speech (sorry -- it's kind of long -- did I mention it has to be ten minutes?!!?):
"Good morning. I’d like to
thank Dean Caron for the opportunity to speak at today’s ceremony. It is a true
honor.
Congratulations to all of
you. Certainly, congratulations on graduating and on earning your degrees. The
completion of an academic milestone such as this deserves a lot of praise. But
I’d also like to congratulate you on your choice to pursue the field of
education. In my fully biased opinion, it is the best field out there. Working
in education will provide you with challenges large and small; if you let them,
these challenges will motivate you, inspire you, and fuel your passion for
making a difference in the lives of your students and, perhaps, for making a
difference in the field of education at large.
When I first began my
educational career in September of 2000, I had a lot of expectations. And I was
right about a few things – teaching was going to be awesome, and it was. I
would love my students, and I did. But there were boatloads of things I never
saw coming, situations that my incessant watching and re-watching of Robin
Williams in Dead Poets Society and
Michelle Pfieffer in Dangerous Minds
couldn’t prepare me for. So, today, I’d like to share with you a few things to
expect as you enter this wonderful profession.
First, what to expect from
the students.
Sometimes, your students
will be smarter than you. I’ve taught high school students who have had
insights on literature that I would have killed to have come up with. And I’ve
worked with first graders who have devised routines and structures for how the
classroom should best operate that were way more effective than the teacher’s
original plan had been. Don’t let this throw you. Invite your students’ voices
in. Expect to learn as much from your students as you hope they will learn from
you.
Some of your students will
hate school. Don’t take this personally. Some of them will be struggling
against a structure of schooling that doesn’t work with their learning style,
or with where they are developmentally. Invite these students to become
learners. Discover what kind of learning environment will work best for them –
do they need the freedom to be able to move around a bit?; Find out what they
get excited about – is there a way to work basketball into an upcoming math
lesson? Expect your students to learn in different ways from one another and to
be interested in different things – learn from these differences and allow them
to make you a stronger teacher, someone who can teach all children, not just those who thrive within a traditional classroom
setting.
Some of your students will
have accomplished amazing feats just by making it to school in the morning.
Some are dealing with unimaginable home lives, some are working part-time or
even almost full-time hours to help support their family, some are struggling
through substance abuse and addictions. Expect to be needed desperately by
these students – expect them to need compassion, expect them to need a hug, or
the occasional granola bar for breakfast. Most of all, expect them to need you
to believe in them, to need you to give them important work to do and important
things to strive for.
And here’s something I can
promise you to expect from ALL of your students. They all want to succeed. It
doesn’t matter if they act like it or not. It doesn’t matter if they’re acting
up in class for a multitude of reasons, reasons that can sometimes be seen, but
are often unseen. No child comes to school hoping to fail that day. Help them
to succeed.
There are a few things you
should expect from adults, too.
Expect lots of advice and
expert opinions (even from those who have never stepped foot in a classroom as
an educator). You may or may not have noticed that I’m five months pregnant.
And as a woman who is in the middle of her first pregnancy, I now consider
myself a bit of an expert on getting a lot of advice thrown my way, often
unsolicited. And most of that advice seems to be designed to scare the living
daylights out of me.
It’s not all that
different from the amount of unsolicited advice and opinions that come your way
as an educator.
I’m not always sure why so
many people prefer to focus on the negative. But, oh, they are out there.
You’ll find them in the staff room among your fellow educators, and you’ll find
them on social media among your Facebook friends. There seems to be a lot of
negativity floating around out there – there are some people and some sources that
will want to fill your mind with all the perceived barriers to being a good
teacher. They’ll tell you you can’t teach effectively these days because of the
Common Core, or because of standardized testing, or because of a certain
school’s discipline policies.
And I won’t sugar coat it
– these things can get in your way at times. They can be frustrating. But they
do not have to limit your effectiveness as a teacher. I work with teachers
every day who teach engaging lessons, who find ways to motivate and challenge
all students. They find ways to do this because they have kept their eyes on
the prize. The students themselves.
You’re in education to
shape young minds. You don’t have to let anything stand in your way of this.
You can start, in big and small ways, to break down some of the barriers that
traditional structures of education have put in place. You can encourage girls
to pursue studies of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. You can
inspire them to be leaders. And the young boys? I’ll be the mother of a young
boy in about four or four-and-a-half months. You can encourage him to love
learning. You can provide structures in his elementary school classroom that
are developmentally appropriate for a seven or eight year old boy. You can make
it possible that learning doesn’t have to be about sitting still and quietly
listening for 45 minutes.
I’m here to tell you that
this is possible. Maybe you’ll work in a non-traditional school that’s finding
exciting and new ways for classrooms and for learning to function. Maybe you’ll
work in a public school that is committed to the Common Core and to
standardized testing. I’m here to tell you that, in either setting, you can be
an effective educator.
How? First, take a lesson
from my pregnancy and don’t listen to the naysayers. They’re going to be out
there. Avoid them. Surround yourself with strong mentors. And I’m not talking about
just your first year or so of teaching, here. Surround yourself with strong
mentors throughout your career. I’m 14 years in, and I still meet up regularly
with positive, strong educational influences.
And don’t stop there.
Insist on being a lifelong learner. Continue your education, formally or
informally. Read, read, read. Read stuff by people who are on the same page as
you. And read stuff by people who stand for things you think you may disagree
with. Be open to having your mind changed. Go to workshops. Take classes. You
can be the positive voice the field of education needs now. More importantly,
you can be the positive voice our students need now.
Thank you, and, again,
congratulations."
Thanks to all the educators in my current and past school districts for teaching me about a lot of what I included in this speech -- that there are effective, wonderful educators in this world doing great things and changing students' lives!!