JiscMail Logo
Email discussion lists for the UK Education and Research communities

Help for STAFF-DEVELOPMENT Archives


STAFF-DEVELOPMENT Archives

STAFF-DEVELOPMENT Archives


STAFF-DEVELOPMENT@JISCMAIL.AC.UK


View:

Message:

[

First

|

Previous

|

Next

|

Last

]

By Topic:

[

First

|

Previous

|

Next

|

Last

]

By Author:

[

First

|

Previous

|

Next

|

Last

]

Font:

Proportional Font

LISTSERV Archives

LISTSERV Archives

STAFF-DEVELOPMENT Home

STAFF-DEVELOPMENT Home

STAFF-DEVELOPMENT  2006

STAFF-DEVELOPMENT 2006

Options

Subscribe or Unsubscribe

Subscribe or Unsubscribe

Log In

Log In

Get Password

Get Password

Subject:

Random Thought: Sharing

From:

Louis Schmier <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Louis Schmier <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Tue, 28 Feb 2006 05:55:34 -0500

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (263 lines)

	Here we go again! It's chilly outside but a fiery message super-heated the inside
and nearly melted my computer screen.  This professor just won't give up.  She is a pit
bull.  But, that's okay.  It's her right.  Besides, I've got skin like a rhino.  More
important, she's still doing me a great unintended service by forcing me to reflect,
formulate, and articulate my 'whys.'  This time, she smoked me with a short and less than
sweet message. "The academic world would be a much better place without braggarts like you
who pollute the intellectual world of higher education with your touch-feely nonsense and
make others feel less than what they are," she wrote, "I know this cuts you to the quick,
but I don't apologize.  You are outrageously selfish to make yourself feel high and mighty
at the expense of others.  Some humility please." 

	I replied, "So, tell me how, then, does lighting my candle lessen the light of
other candles.  If anything, it increases the ability of the other candles to chase away
more and more distant shadows and flood larger places with brighter light.  What have I
said to make you feel lesser? When I experience a deep sense of life's harmony, beauty,
and awesomeness in the classroom?  What have I said that makes you feel low and puny?  How
I feel when I see students being creative and I feel I am making a difference?  How am I
outrageously selfish?  When I show and tell how my teaching feels purposeful?  When am I
the braggart?  When I work with students and faculty I discover the great potential in
each of them?  

	"I know when I see something that makes me stand silently in awe, I don't shrivel.
When I look up in the skies, I don't feel insignificant.  When I see a great work of art,
I don't have a sense of being diminished.  When I read of a selfless heroic act, I don't
feel inadequate.  I don't know about you, if anything, I get goose bumps; my eyes go agog
a 'wow;' my eyes swell up with happy tears; and, I get an admiring lump in my throat.  All
that awe and wonder connects me to myself, other human beings, and something beyond than
myself."

	"Your blistering comments remind me of a portion of a discussion between
Agrippinus and Epictetus, that's hanging above my computer and goes something like this:
'....you consider yourself to be only one thread of those which are in the tunic. Well
then, it was fitting for you to take care how you should be like the rest of men, just as
the thread has no design to be anything different to the other threads. But I wish to be
purple, that small part which is bright, and makes all the rest appear graceful and
beautiful. Why then do you tell me to make myself like the many? And if I do, how shall I
still be purple?'"	

	"I know I can't please everyone.  I don't even try.  For one thing, it would be a
mistake to play the 100% game.  It's a no winner.  For another thing, I'd lose my
integrity, individuality, authenticity, and freedom.  For still another thing, there are
so many different people out there with different perspectives I could not write a 'one
size fits all' universally inoffensive pabulum piece if I wanted to.  It would have no
true meaning other than attempted pandering.  I have often said that sending out a message
on the internet is like playing roulette:  'around and around it goes; into whose mailbox
it falls you never knows.'  All I can do is be true to myself and write from me rather
than try to kiss up to others in order to gain their favor.  You see, I accept the risk of
decent and sincere people such as you taking umbrage with my well-intentioned comments.
Of course, I am accountable for what I say and do, and I do assume responsibility for my
verbal actions.  At the same time, we each are responsible for the way we interpret other
people's motives or words and how we respond to them."

	"In other words, we are the blame we level and/or responsibility we accept.  We
are our responses to people around us and to circumstance."

	"When I act in good faith and without malice, I'm not responsible for the way
others feel, for I cannot control how they will respond to my words. How can I worry about
pleasing people whom I do not know and what they're going to think?  How can I do anything
creative if the whole thing of what I feel and think and do is motivated by trying to
please somebody else and worrying about what others think?  When a sculptor sculpts, he or
she is both pleasing him/herself and hoping that whatever he or she is creating will reach
someone else who'll see it on that level. To worry about someone picking it apart and
discussing it element for element, and trying to knock you down or weaken it in any way
doesn't amount to anything but a waste of material.  When a master artist panders to
others, he or she has reduced him/herself to the depths of being a commercialized
technician."

	"Now, let me take this several steps forward.  The demand for humility such as the
one you leveled at me is often a false accusation that cowers so many into silent corners
as safe and disengaged 'lurkers,' onlookers, and by-standers.  You want to shape the
discourse.  Why would you deny me that opportunity?  I don't share my experiences to exalt
myself.  I am truly sorry you interpret my words as signs that I'm cocky, egotistical,
into myself, self-promoting, arrogant, self-serving, lacking humility.  What would you
have me do?  My immediate answer is that I'm a guy cut from the cloth of Joshua 1:9, "Be
strong and of good courage; do not be afraid, nor be dismayed...."  Do you want me to
remain silent?  Do you want me to crumple the brim of my hat in supplication?  Do you want
me to hunch over and bow my head in submission?  Do you want my knees to buckle under peer
pressure?  Stare at the ground?  Stay in the shadows of the corner?  Slump around?  Be
invisible?  Be fearful of what others would judge?  Bleach the purple of my thread to
white?  If I did, that would be false humility.  And, there's enough false humility going
around in academia."  

	"False humility is nothing less than a dark pretension-ness costumed in saintly
white robes.  It's arrogance in disguise.   It's self-righteousness behind a mask.  It's a
facade hiding feelings of superiority.  It has to do with claiming publicly you are less
than you privately believe you are in order to be more publicly more than you actually
are, that you can do less than you believe you can, and almost always demands outside
confirmation or affirmation as a cover up an inner feeling of insecurity and inferiority.
The person with false humility has a driving need to convince others of how unassuming he
or she is.  It's self-centered selfishness par excellence.  It's little more than an act."


	"True humility is not self-effacement.  It's not silence.  It's not invisibility.
It's easy to pose as an irrelevancy; it takes no effort to disappear into the crowd, to go
silent, and to be one of Agrippinus' undistinguished white threads.  True humility is
uniqueness.  It is self-respect.  It's courage.  It's seeing yourself clearly both as you
presently are, presently can be, and presently should be.   It's putting your values into
practice.  It's a feeling of being worthy, but not worth more or less than anyone else no
matter your position or renown or length of your resume.  It's a respect that doesn't come
from being high above others on some summit.  It has to do with acknowledging and
respecting who you are and what you can do and what you can achieve, without any outside
confirmation or approval.  Above all, it's a recognition that while you are worthy there
is something worthier and greater than you, and that you are in the service of others.
It's knowing, as Epictetus said, 'When you have gone into your room, and shut the door,
you are not alone.'  Humility is a recognized, acknowledged, and activated affirmation
that, as John Donne would have said, you are not an island and whatever you do must be a
conscious investment in the well-being of others." 

	"I am a teacher. Am I supposed to just sit here on my hands, be quiet, be
pressured, stay unnoticed, just think about things, be bored, believe I'm a lesser being,
be not be willing to dare, worry, be insecure, be overly concerned with what others think,
try to impress others, struggle to get the approval of others, not have fun in what I'm
doing, not have a purpose in life, not be emotional, not be spiritual--yes, spiritual, be
without a vision, be without meaning, not know where my future's going, not knowing how to
get there, not realize that teaching is the greatest thing that has happen to me?  Am I to
stay in the shadows?  Am I not to share my philosophy and my experiences, my outlooks and
insights, my successes and mistakes, how I apply that approach to education?  Is that how
I reach out?  Is that how I touch?  Is that how I make a difference?  Is that how I do
important things?  Is that how I feel fulfilled?  When we make believe we're small, whom
does it serve?  Aren't my gifts and talents and insights and accomplishments meant to help
others, just as those of others are meant to help me?"   

	"I'm a teacher.  I don't seek to impose.  I don't want to coerce.  I don't seek to
dictate.  I don't demand to control.  I don't have to dominate.  Why would I?  If I've
learned anything since my epiphany, especially from reading student journals, it is three
things.  First, control, coercion, and domination are merely ways for looking out only for
yourself and your own interests at the expense of others.  They're ways to merely to prove
you're right.  They're ways to protect and promote only yourself.  Proclamations to the
contrary, they seldom consider others or operate for the benefit of others.    Second, the
more any teacher tries to impose control the more people and situations become
uncontrollable.  Third, in the spirit of Carl Rogers, I realize that I really can't
control anyone.  So, what's the alternative to control?  Persuasion.  Persuasion, as Peter
Senge indicates, brings people on board, brings them along, helps them buy in, offers them
ownership, empowers them, and has a better chance of lasting.  I want to persuade people
that there is an alternative to coercion and control and imposition.  I want to bring
others along.  I want to persuade you how wonderful each student is. I want to offer you
an insight how much hope and faith and belief and love you can feel when you work with
students and colleagues whom you care about.  I want to transmit the blessings of my
realizations of the rich fulfillment from teaching in ways that promote, encourage, and
support connectedness rather than separateness.  I want to offer alternative views.  I
want to offer new choices to speak up with confidence, act with courage, and struggle to
bring new life to this age old profession of teaching.  I want to speak up and affirm my
views and choices.  My purpose is to be contagious. I want to "infect" you with seeing
what I see, hearing what I hear, feeling what I feel, loving what I love, believing what I
believe, having hope in what I have hope, having faith in what I have faith.  I try to
communicate what I've learned or the new ideas generated in conversations, letters and
even these commentaries. New insights are a great gift, and I think we should open them
and share them.  There's that Eskimo adage about sharing the richness of the hunt again"

	"Do you know why I throw myself into teaching and do it publicly?  It's not the
sin of pride or of feeling important; it's because of the damn importance to teaching that
so many of us academics regrettably don't accept.  It's the blessing of feeling worthy and
of doing important things.  It's not to do anything for my own sake; it's to do things for
the sake of each student.  It's not the sin of material wanting or desiring public
adulation; it's the blessing of having meaning and purpose.  It's because I cannot achieve
any sense of fulfillment without having a vision in which I fervently believe and which I
vigorously pursue.  It's because I have discovered that only when I have my heart in it
with all my heart, live for it, taste it, die for it, that I won't doubt, fear, be bored,
burn out, be frustrated, and be resigned.    And, I will find happiness, satisfaction,
fulfillment, and a worth that once was beyond my wildest dreams and once thought could
never be mine." 

	"So many people look high and low, in every nook and cranny, for beauty.  They
will search it out in gardens, in meadows and forests, on mountain tops, in the great
museums, on the high seas, in foreign cultures, and in the heavens.  Yet, so few search
for it in the classroom; so few search it out in each student and in themselves; so few
acknowledge the blessing, dignity, mysteriousness, sacredness, honor, grandeur, nobility,
wholesomeness that is each student and themselves.  Yet, everyone is a miracle and I have
discovered in the last fifteen years that to see each student as a miracle is one of the
greatest daily vitamins I can take.  What's wrong with sharing my feelings and the effects
of those feelings that makes the classroom for me a dose of delight, a place that makes me
feel energized, a place that stimulates my imagination and creativity and that of others,
a place where I and others feel hopeful and faithful and believing and loving, a place
where I feel in tune with and connected with people, a place where I can't stop smiling, a
place where I feel connected with something bigger than myself, and a place that is a
fountain of youth for me where I am young beyond my years?"

	"Don't like what I say?  Fine.  Don't agree with what I do?  That's okay.  Don't
accept the rules I've set for myself?  No problem.  Reject my assertion that mindfulness,
hope, belief, faith, love, passion, empathy creates effective result in constant emotional
and physical and intellectual and spiritual renewal needed for enduring teaching and
learning?   I can live with that.  Deny the results of studies and research?  I'll go
along with that.  But, I ask you.  When do you meditate and reflect?  What is it that you
meditate on, reflect upon, and articulate about?  What is the 'why' of who you are and
what you do?  What is the meaning and purpose of what you're doing?  What is your personal
mission statement?  What personal vision motivates and inspires you?  You see I have found
that you teach not only from where you are, but perhaps more importantly from where you
have been and from where you are heading."

	"Understand this:  the ideas I stand for, the vision I have, the guiding credo
I've devised for myself, I admit are not totally all mine. They're a mix of superbly
tasting ingredients.  I'm not all that original.  I have borrowed some meaty ingredients
from friends and colleagues too numerous to list whom I admire and from whom I have
learned much.  I have pulled more than a few nourishing tidbits from different
disciplines.  I have drawn some from Socrates, Aristotle, Rumi, Marcus Aurelius,
Maimonides, Aquinas, Confucius, Buddha, Lao Tse, Jesus, Moses, Paul, Isaiah, Micah, et al.
I have pulled some spices out from the Koran, the Old Testament, the Talmud, and the New
Testament.  I have 'swiped' some morsels from the likes of the Dalai Lama, Rashi, Locke,
Pope, Jung, Ghandi, Martin Luther King, Mother Teresa, Thoreau, Picasso, Shaw, Emerson,
Twain, Thich Nhat Hanh, Michaelangelo, Albert Einstein, Elie Wiesel, Thomas Jefferson, and
a untold host of others.  I have 'stolen' a lot from Dewey, Maslow, Seligman, Palmer,
Senge, Gardner, Jung, Goleman, Kabat-Zinn, Telushkin, Rogers, and--yes--Dr. Seuss.  And I
have put them, and a host of others, together into a pot, mixed and stirred and stewed to
create a recipe with which I am always tinkering of who I am, what I feel, what I think,
what I dream, what I do, where I want to be, who I want to be, and how I get there."  

	"So, if you don't like the rules, values, principles, visions, callings,
admonitions, findings of my 'mentors,' and my recipe, whose would you use and how would
you cook them into soul food that nourishes your feelings, beliefs, faiths, loves,
thoughts and actions?"  

	"It's a question that even more important in these days.  Have you watch the PBS
program, DECLINING BY DEGREES:  HIGHER EDUCATION AT RISK?  Do so.  It's discomforting.
Read the sobering editorial in this past Sunday's New York Times, 'Proof of Learning at
College?'  Do so.  It's disturbing.  Consider the recent findings from the National
Assessment of Adult Literacy and the suggestion by the chairman of the presidential
Commission on the Future of Higher Education that standardized testing of what students
learn in higher education should be imposed on colleges and universities.  Do so.  It's
scary.  And, going into defensive denial or silence or even vocal haughtiness won't alter
the situation, nor will forming a bemoaning mutual admiration society.  Teaching needs to
become a true top priority on an equal plane with research and publication in the higher
educational universe.  That student out there has to become as important, if not more
important, than a book, grant, conference paper, a keynote address, a line item on a
resume, and the like.  We need to stop treating teaching as a peripheral or marginal or
lip service or sometimes issue.  Maybe we ought not to sacrifice the student in that
classroom in our quest for renown and tenure.  Maybe we ought not go into and stay in the
classroom as ill-prepared and untrained and unlearned as most of us have done and still
do.  Maybe we ought to stop accepting an amateurishness of what we do in the classroom
that we wouldn't accept in our scholarship.  Maybe we ought to accept our dual role and be
prepared to become future classroom teachers as vigorously as we are prepared to become
future scholars.  Maybe we ought to be required to keep abreast of the new findings about
teaching and learning as much as we are required to keep abreast of advances in our
disciplines. Then again, maybe we ought to finally seriously think about implementing the
recommendations of oft referred to but usually neglected Boyer report, SCHOLARSHIP
RECONSIDERED and give unto the teachers that which is teaching equally and as prestigious
as we give unto the scholars that which is research and publication.  If higher education
truly embraces what this means, it will require a complete overhaul of not only how we
practice in the classroom, but how we train for the classroom.    It all gets down to
living and living up to our poetic mission statements.  It all boils down to a
mindfulness, sensitivity, respect, and being in the service for each student, our
disciplines, scholarship, and as well as for ourselves.  And, that would make for better
education and a better education."

Make it a good day.

      --Louis--
 
 
Louis Schmier                                www.therandomthoughts.com
Department of History                   www.halcyon.com/arborhts/louis.html
Valdosta State University
Valdosta, Georgia 31698                   /\   /\  /\             /\
(229-333-5947)                                /^\\/   \/  \   /\/\_ //\ \/\
                                                        /     \/   \_ \/ /   \/ /\/   \  \
/\
                                                       //\/\/ /\    \__/__/_/\_\   \_\/__\
                                               /\"If you want to climb mountains,\ /\
                                             /    \    don't practice on mole hills"- /
\ 
     
 
 

Top of Message | Previous Page | Permalink

JiscMail Tools


RSS Feeds and Sharing


Advanced Options


Archives

November 2023
August 2023
April 2023
March 2023
November 2022
October 2022
August 2022
May 2022
April 2022
February 2022
October 2021
September 2021
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
May 2021
March 2021
February 2021
January 2021
December 2020
November 2020
October 2020
September 2020
July 2020
May 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
April 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018
December 2017
November 2017
October 2017
September 2017
August 2017
June 2017
May 2017
April 2017
March 2017
February 2017
January 2017
December 2016
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
July 2016
June 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
February 2016
January 2016
December 2015
November 2015
October 2015
September 2015
August 2015
July 2015
June 2015
May 2015
April 2015
March 2015
February 2015
January 2015
December 2014
November 2014
October 2014
September 2014
August 2014
July 2014
June 2014
May 2014
April 2014
March 2014
February 2014
January 2014
December 2013
November 2013
October 2013
September 2013
August 2013
July 2013
June 2013
May 2013
April 2013
March 2013
February 2013
January 2013
December 2012
November 2012
October 2012
September 2012
August 2012
July 2012
June 2012
May 2012
April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998


JiscMail is a Jisc service.

View our service policies at https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/policyandsecurity/ and Jisc's privacy policy at https://www.jisc.ac.uk/website/privacy-notice

For help and support help@jisc.ac.uk

Secured by F-Secure Anti-Virus CataList Email List Search Powered by the LISTSERV Email List Manager