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Here it is, mid-August, and I don't have my syllabus
(or all my plans) together for the fall semester that will begin
in a couple of weeks. I leave for the ACS meeting in a day
and a half. There are so many things to do. Entropy reigns!
(Well, only figuratively. See the papers on pages 1382-1397.)
Will I get it all together before that big first day of classes?
At this time of year I always have great plans, but also
I wonder whether I am Charlie Brownthe eternal
optimist, ready to try to kick that football one more time. I know
I could score a field goal if only the football weren't pulled
away at the last millisecond. But it seems invariably to be
pulled away. Or maybe I just don't connect with it properly.
Why do I keep kicking that football? What is it about a new
school year that gets me psyched up and excited?
Teaching (that is, devising and implementing
environments and experiences that help people learn) is a
challenge, largely because we don't really know that much about
how to do it effectively. It's so easy for that football to slither
away, never having gotten off the ground. That's one of the
things that make teaching interesting and exciting. There are
so many ideas to try, and it's fun to see whether they will
work. Both successes and failures suggest additional new
approaches. Teaching science, like science itself, seems always to
produce more questions than answers. For those of us who enjoy
experiments, it is an ideal profession.
Another reason to get fired up is that a new school
year offers opportunities to work with such wonderful
people. Whether courses are successful depends on teachers,
students, and interactions among them. Every fall there are new
groups of students, providing teachers with new opportunities,
challenges, experiences, and even friendships. Every fall we
teachers have new ideas about both content and pedagogy
that spur us to greater efforts and thereby help to develop
our students' intellects and abilities. Even more important is
that young people (and the young at heart who come back
to school to learn more) bring with them a vitality whose
vicarious effect is to energize teachers and everyone else
around them. A school or campus full of students is a far
different place from one populated by faculty alone.
Perhaps the best reason to get excited about a new
semester is that I really don't think we are Charlie Browns
kicking footballs. That's why this editorial's title includes a
question mark. We teachers have a much greater effect on
students than we seem to think. Inured as we are to the
process of grading, correcting, and finding faults and problems
that students should avoid, we often concentrate on what is
wrong or imperfect about what we do. Thus we run the risk of
losing sight of the big pictureour overall success. Even a
student who achieves a poor grade comes out of a
chemistry course knowing far more than someone who has not taken
chemistry at all. Most students have learned a great
deal, though few have learned as much as we would have liked.
As Marie Curie put it, "One never notices what has been
done; one can only see what remains to be done." We should
savor those moments when former students tell us that what
they learned in our courses was of great value
subsequentlyeven if they hadn't thought it would be. And we should
multiply by a large factor the number of such moments, based on
the likelihood that there are lots more students out there
who did not think to tell us.
The magnitude of intellectual growth that can occur
in a year was driven home to me a long time ago when I
taught physical chemistry in two successive years. The first year
was the first time I had taught the course, and it went very
well. This was largely due to the great group of students I had.
At the beginning of the second year I missed that first group
of students, thinking the new class to be far inferior.
However, by the end of the second year the new class had matured
intellectually in essentially the same way that the first one
had, and their average score on a standardized examination
was within experimental error of the first group's. Only then
did I realize how much students were gaining from that
coursenot just book learning, but also synthesizing and
unifying chemical knowledge and becoming more mature in their
approach to problems and to science. I think that this kind
of maturation is happening in most of our courses, even
though it may be less easily observable.
In A Backward Glance Edith Wharton wrote, "In
spite of illness, in spite even of the arch-enemy sorrow, one
can remain alive long past the usual date of disintegration if
one is unafraid of change, insatiable in intellectual curiosity,
interested in big things, and happy in small ways." As
teachers we ought to rejoice in what seem to be only small
successes, be confident that our students will achieve great things,
maintain our curiosity and help students to enhance theirs,
and embrace change. The beginning of a school year is a
great time to reaffirm thisand to recognize that it also will
be lots of fun!
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