Sun.Star Pampanga

Wistful on graduation­s

-

GRADUATION­S always make me wistful and to be honest, a little bit guilty. As a teacher, it is once again an occasion to stock of the work that has been done and I can’t help but feel, based on self-assessment, that I have been found wanting. Did I do justice to my students with my efforts? Often times, as my age progresses, I actually prefer asking the other question. Are the students making the proper effort commensura­te to my precious time? Over time, I note that I am becoming the grumpy professor every one avoided in college.

The wistfulnes­s during graduation­s, however, I believe has to do with the difficult work that we do as teachers. Unlike other profession­s who can see the tangible results of their efforts such as when lawyers win cases, or when jeepney drivers end another day of bringing employees and students to their places of work and study, teachers shape instead nebulous and intangible matters such as young hearts and minds.

In sociology, the profession of teaching is engaged in what we call as “people work.” We work on people and our results are also people themselves. There are grades that we use to assess the learning of our students, but these are not our ultimate products. The totality of the person is the end result of our efforts, actually, but we are not alone in the shaping of personalit­ies and identities. We share this most important task with other social institutio­ns such as the family, the church, and others. There is, therefore, that difficulty in isolating the impact of a particular teacher to a singular student given that there are other sources of influence that define the person.

Compared to the minimal influence of a single teacher to a class that she only meets twice a week for three hours, the deeper impact of societyat-large to a person should be recognized. There is a tendency for university officialdo­m and other sectors to bloat the impact of teachers to their students when in fact there are far larger and more powerful institutio­ns that actually hold sway such as popular culture and religion.

Teachers only effect change to a limited degree to a few select students. In fact, given my decades of teaching experience, my impression is that it has been a hit and miss affair. One stands in front class making an effort to elucidate on topics or concepts to the best of one’s ability with the awareness that only one or two or, if lucky, a handful, actually appreciate and learn from the process. Most students merely wing it most of the time. They pretend that they have learned something when they obviously have not. Many of them have mastered the appearance­s of a studious and interested student but come oral recitation­s or answering essay questions, all the play acting is revealed.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines