Monday, February 17, 2014

They Will NEVER Forget How You Made Them Feel

As I read through the student surveys and comments that our own RMS kids said about us, I thought this blog post that one of my best friends (and fellow principal) passed onto me, now resonated more than ever with us. Check it out....and ask yourself...what will the students remember MOST about us (and you)? Will they FEEL you cared more about THEM or the content? Do they feel safe here? Do they feel loved? Do they FEEL we believe in them...whole-heartedly? Have we built the bonds and relationships with them...that they will look forward to us coming to visit them next year at different events?! I TRULY hope so...because I know that is what gets me up each and every day...the fact that we CAN, WILL, and ARE making a difference in each of their young lives! Enjoy the read...and take a few minutes to reflect how it relates personally to you. Have a marvelous Monday team!
HP
What Students Remember Most About Teachers
Dear Young Teacher Down the Hall,
I saw you as you rushed passed me in the lunch room. Urgent. In a hurry to catch a bite before the final bell would ring calling all the students back inside. I noticed that your eyes showed tension. There were faint creases in your forehead. And I asked you how your day was going and you sighed.
“Oh, fine,” you replied.
But I knew it was anything but fine. I noticed that the stress was getting to you. I could tell that the pressure was rising. And I looked at you and made an intentional decision to stop you right then and there. To ask you how things were really going. Was it that I saw in you a glimpse of myself that made me take the moment?
You told me how busy you were, how much there was to do. How little time there was to get it all done. I listened. And then I told you this: I told you to remember that at the end of the day, it’s not about the lesson plan. It’s not about the fancy stuff we teachers make — the crafts we do, the stories we read, the papers we laminate. No, that’s not really it. That’s not what matters most.
And as I looked at you there wearing all that worry under all that strain, I said it’s about being there for your kids. Because at the end of the day, most students won’t remember what amazing lesson plans you’ve created. They won’t remember how organized your bulletin boards are. How straight and neat are the desk rows. No, they’ll not remember that amazing decor you’ve designed. But they will remember you. Your kindness. Your empathy. Your care and concern. They’ll remember that you took the time to listen. That you stopped to ask them how they were. How they really were. They’ll remember the personal stories you tell about your life: your home, your pets, your kids. They’ll remember your laugh. They’ll remember that you sat and talked with them while they ate their lunch. Because at the end of the day, what really matters is YOU. What matters to those kids that sit before you in those little chairs, legs pressed up tight under tables oft too small- what matters to them is you. You are that difference in their lives.
And when I looked at you then with tears in your eyes, emotions rising to the surface and I told you gently to stop trying so hard- I also reminded you that your own expectations were partly where the stress stemmed. For we who truly care are often far harder on ourselves than our students are willing to be. Because we who truly care are often our own worst enemy. We mentally beat ourselves up for trivial failures. We tell ourselves we’re not enough. We compare ourselves to others. We work ourselves to the bone in the hopes of achieving the perfect lesson plan. The most dynamic activities. The most engaging lecture. The brightest, fanciest furnishings. Because we want our students to think we’re the very best at what we do and we believe that this status of excellence is achieved merely by doing. But we forget- and often. Excellence is more readily attained by being.
Being available.
Being kind.

Being compassionate.

Being transparent.

Being real.

Being thoughtful.

Being ourselves.
And of all the students I know who have lauded teachers with the laurels of the highest acclaim, those students have said of those teachers that they cared. You see, kids can see through to the truth of the matter. And while the flashy stuff can entertain them for a while, it’s the steady constance of empathy that keeps them connected to us. It’s the relationships we build with them. It’s the time we invest. It’s all the little ways we stop and show concern. It’s the love we share with them: of learning. Of life. And most importantly, of people. And while we continually strive for excellence in our profession as these days of fiscal restraint and heavy top-down demandskeep coming at us- relentless and quick. We need to stay the course. For ourselves and for our students. Because it’s the human touch that really matters.
It’s you, their teacher, that really matters.
So go back to your class and really take a look. See past the behaviors, the issues and the concerns, pressing as they might be. Look beyond the stack of papers on your desk, the line of emails in your queue. Look further than the classrooms of seasoned teachers down the hall. Look. And you will see that it’s there- right inside you. The ability to make an impact. The chance of a lifetime to make a difference in a child’s life. And you can do this now. Right where you are, just as you are. Because all you are right now is all you ever need to be for them today. And who you are tomorrow will depend much on who and what you decide to be today.
It’s in you. I know it is.
Fondly,
That Other Teacher Down the Hall

Monday, February 3, 2014

Effort Is Like Toothpaste....You Can Always Squeeze Out A Little Bit More!


Did you know that at 211 degrees water is HOT...at 212 degrees it BOILS...and with boiling water comes steam...and steam can power a locomotive!? What does this have to do with us you ask? A LOT! This video link below...is all about what just ONE degree of "effort" in the way we do things...can pay off exponentially with our RMS kids and in our personal life, as well! The line between failure and success is SO FINE that we....are often ON the line and don't even know it. So the next time you are ready to throw up your hands up and say..."I quit”...pray for a little more patience and decide to give just 1 degree MORE effort. (even if your brain tells you that you can’t…don’t listen) I know this is easier said than done...and I struggle with it as well! But when you REALLY think about it...one degree is NOT gonna kill us and according to Vince Lombardi, "Inches make a champion!" I think he might have known a little about that in his field of work! :) It’s not about the LONG race...our job is about many short races...and with these short races all it takes is PERSERVERENCE. In the end...the difference between success and failure is not HOW you look, HOW your dress, or HOW you've done it in the past...It's about the HERE and NOW and HOW YOU THINK! Let's pull together and reach down deep inside and find that EXTRA degree that can ensure that every outcome can be a SUCCESS STORY! Have a marvelous Monday team!
Click here to see what I'm talking about! :)