common senseI was reminded again about the problem with common sense when  I read that  the Alabama House  of Representatives had  blocked a teacher code of conduct from becoming law. Opponents argued that the standards were too vague.  Supporters argued that they weren’t because they were based on “common sense and something all parents, teachers and legislators should support”.

Common sense is not common. It is very subjective.  Let me explain.  I teach in a high school with a student population of about 1 700 students.  You could  easily hear over 60 languages being spoken as you negotiate your way through the halls from one class to the next.  Many new immigrants settle in the area served by our school. These immigrants bring with them “the common sense” that served them in their homeland. It may or may not be the “common sense” of the community they live in now.

Some students in my class have told me that teachers ought to be able to beat their students when students misbehave.  That made common sense to them.  That’s what teachers did  “back home”  and it worked,  they tell me.  Kids behaved themselves because they could be beaten if they didn’t. A few parents have even given teachers permission to beat their kids if they misbehave.  Thank fully, the common sense  that  dictates corporal punishment for student misbehaviour is not common to everyone.

I don’t mean to imply here that it is only the case that some immigrants have different “common senses”.  That’s certainly not the case at all. I just wanted to make the point that common sense can vary from culture to culture, from community to community and even within a community.   There’s nothing common about common sense.

In Ontario, the Education Act, law,  sets out the code of conduct for teachers  regarding  students and for students regarding teachers.  The code of conduct is not left to common sense.  It doesn’t seem to me there are any major problems with the code. If anyone knows of any,  I would appreciate hearing about them.   I don’t want to go into a lot of detail here  except to say that teachers who break the code of conduct suffer consequences for their actions.  Sometimes that means they have their teaching certificate withdrawn; sometimes they  are required to get appropriate counseling or training.

I think it is useful to have a code of conduct enacted in law because it forces everyone to be on the same page about what is expected from teachers and from students. It doesn’t matter what a person’s “common sense” tells them.  It’s what the code of conduct as law says that counts.  I think this gets around the problem of  different “common senses”. What do you think?

Photo thanks to didbyatgraham

Whose faulquestion markt is it when students fail to achieve?   Some like the eight out of nine school trustees in the Houston Independent School District think  that it’s the teachers’ fault when students fail to achieve and plan to fire them.  Others think that it’s the parents’ fault when children fail in school because of poor parenting skills or because parents don’t spend enough time with their kids. Still others blame the media or the students’ peer group or the kids themselves for their failure.

I’ve been teaching academically at-risk teens for well over 25  years now, and I can tell you the reason why kids fail at school is a complex one.  Kids fail to achieve in school for any number of reasons.  It’s easy to point the finger of blame at teachers, at the administration, at the school system,  at  parents or at kids   themselves when they  fail to achieve to their potential.

The  school trustees who think it’s the teachers’ fault when students fail to achieve are misguided. Yes, perhaps some teachers need support to help improve their teaching practice.  I’m not denying that. But some parents also need support to improve their parenting skills, and  some students also need support to help them take ownership for their own learning. The education system itself needs some major changes so that schools offer the programs that better meet the needs of all students.   Kids also need to realize they have to take responsibility for their learning.

We probably all have heard the statement ” it takes the  entire village to raise a child”.  Well, it takes the entire village to educate one  as well. We need to stop blaming.  Blaming doesn’t help. Instead we need to ask  what can the villagers do, what support can they give  to all the stakeholders so that  kids can succeed at school.  After all,  the village will benefit if it’s kids live up to their potential. The way I see it is that the village supports kids when they are young, and then the kids support the village when they grown up. It’s a win-win situation.

Over the years,  I’ve found that it takes a lot of effort to make math easy for my students.  End of semester exams are fast approaching, and I am doing my utmost to prepare my students.  I’ve created some new review material for my grade nine math students that I hoped would help them better understand the unit on slope, intercepts, lines and the equations y = mx and y = mx + b.  That’s pretty abstract stuff for some of my grade nine students, especially the ones who didn’t actually pass math in grade eight but because of social promotion are now in my grade nine math class.

It’s been a challenge all semester long to keep these kids engaged enough so they can learn.  I feel as if I’ve been dancing as fast as I can. I have found using the LCD projector or even the overhead projector to  teach the lesson and take up work useful.  I don’t know exactly why kids pay more attention when  my lesson is projected on a screen than written on  the blackboard.  Maybe the screen reminds  them of of a video monitor?  I don’t know why,  but  since it works I keep doing it.  Has anyone else found this to be  the case?

The last couple of days have been pretty hectic.  I’ve been  pushing my students  to do their best, and to be honest, it’s exhausting.  At the end of class today,  I was beginning to think that maybe  I was pushing myself too much, too.  I had spent most of Saturday creating review material and most of Sunday refining the exam so that my students  could demonstrate their learning to the best of their ability.

My husband, not a teacher,  was watching  all this and told me  that I was handing my students  their lessons on a silver platter. He felt I was doing too much.  I told him that I wasn’t handing them their lessons on a silver platter.  I was differentiating instruction. I thought that was funny.  He didn’t.  I guess it’s an inside joke.

Today at the end of class as I was gathering up  my materials, just dying for a cup tea to sooth my throat,  one of my students came over and told me something that had made all that work on the weekend and all those other weekends this semester worthwhile.  He told me that he liked the way I taught because I made math easy.  He had never found math easy before.  If he didn’t get it, I would explain it in another way.   I need to remember those words when I get discouraged or feel overwhelmed. Yes,  making math easy takes a lot of work,  but it is so rewarding. Now,  for that cup of tea.

j0433160That makes sense I thought as I read this  from  Positive Psychology News.

research shows that within a social network, happiness spreads among people up to three degrees of separation. That means when you feel happy, your friend’s friend’s friend has a higher likelihood of feeling happy too. And, it applies in both real and virtual worlds.

We all know people who are mostly happy and others who are mostly unhappy.  I try to avoid people who are always unhappy. They really drag me down.  Being with people who are mostly happy is energizing, while  being with people who are mostly unhappy just sucks the energy out of me.  Who needs that!

It’s encouraging to know that happiness can spread like a virus and affect people we aren’t directly in contact with. I kind of like the idea that when I am happy  my  students can catch my happiness and spread it  to others they know, etc., etc.

As far as happiness in the virtual world,  I can see that happening too.  I find that when I read  blogs like Mathew’s or Tracy’s or listen to a podcasts like Jason’s or watch the TED videos that  have  a positive, happy tone,  I can’t help but feeling happy.  I’ve never meet any of these people in person, but it doesn’t matter. I’m still happy after our virtual meeting.  Imagine all the happiness that gets spread this way.

I imagine that all the doom and gloom we hear in the media affects us negatively and spreads to our social network, too.  Scary. I wonder if I should stop being a news junkie and listen to jazz more often.  Listening to jazz makes me happier than watching the news. In fact, I’m listening to jazz.fm as I write this post and I’m feeling pretty happy. That, is a good thing.

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    These are my personal views and not those of my employer.