Воскресенье, 29.12.2024, 06:27
Приветствую Вас Гость | RSS
Общие вопросы
Начальный уровень
Элементарный
Ближе к среднему
Средний
Выше среднего
Продвинутый
Цитата дня
Поиск
Наш опрос
Как бы Вы хотели изучать английский язык?
Всего ответов: 107
Статистика

Онлайн всего: 1
Гостей: 1
Пользователей: 0

Учим английский вместе

I am a Teacher

  I am a Teacher.
  I was born the first moment that a question leaped from the mouth of a child.
  I have been many people in many places. I am Socrates exciting the youth of Athens to discover new ideas through the use of questions. I am Anne Sullivan tapping out the secrets of the universe into the outstretched hand of Helen Keller. I am Aesop and Christian Andersen revealing truth through countless stories. I am Marva Collins fighting for every child’s right to an education. I am Mary McLeod Bethune building a great college for my people, using orange crates for desks. And I am Bel Kaufman struggling to go Up The Down Staircase.
  The names of those who have practiced my profession ring like a hall of fame for humanity… Booker T. Washington, Buddha, Confucius, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Moses and Jesus. I am also those whose names and faces have long been forgotten but whose lessons and character will always be remembered in the accomplishments of their students. I have wept for joy at the weddings of former students, laughed with glee at the birth of their children and stood with head bowed in grief and confusion by graves dug too son for bodies far too young.
  Throughout the course of a day I have been called upon to be an actor, friend, nurse and doctor, coach, finder of lost articles, money lender, taxi driver, psychologist, substitute parent, salesman, politician and keeper of the faith.
  Despite the maps, charts, formulas, verbs, stories and books, I have really had nothing to teach, for my students really have only themselves to learn, and I know it takes the whole world to tell you who you are.
  I am a paradox. I speak loudest when I listen the most. My greatest gifts are in what I am willing to appreciatively receive from my students.
  Material wealth is not one of my goals, but I am a full-time treasure seeker in my quest for new opportunities for my students to use their talents and in my constant search for those talents that sometimes lie buried in self-defeat.
  I am the most fortunate of all who labor.
  A doctor is allowed to usher life into the world in one magic moment. I am allowed to see that life is reborn each day with new questions, ideas and friendships.
  An architect knows that if he builds with care, his structure may stand for centuries. A teacher knows that if he builds with love and truth, what he builds will last forever.
  I am a warrior, daily doing battle against peer pressure, negativity, fear, conformity, prejudice, ignorance and apathy. But I have great allies: Intelligence, Curiosity, Parental Support, Individuality, Creatively, Faith, Love and Laughter all rush to my banner with indomitable support.
  And who do I have to thank for this wonderful life I am so fortunate to experience, but you the public, the parents.
  For you have done me the great honor to entrust to me your greatest contribution to eternity, your children.
  And so I have a past that is rich in memories. I have a present that is challenging, adventurous and fun because I am allowed to spend my days with the future.
  I am a teacher… and I thank God for it every day.
 
Explanatory notes
 
Socrates (469? – 399 B.C.) – Athenian philosopher.
Anne (Annie) Sullivan (1866 – 1936) – U.S. teacher of Helen Keller.
Helen Keller (1880 – 1968) – U.S. lecturer, author, and educator, blind and deaf from infancy.
Aesop (c.620 – c.560 B.C.) – Greek writer of fables.
Hans Christian Andersen (1805 – 1875) – Danish novelist and writer of fairy stories.
Marva Collins – contemporary U.S. educator.
Mary McLeod (1875 – 1955) – U.S. educator and civil rights leader.
Bel Kaufman (born in 1911) – granddaughter of Shalom Aleichem, contemporary U.S. short story and script writer, novelist and teacher, author of the school-inspired best-seller "Up the Down Staircase ” (first published in the U.S.A. in 1964, in Great Britain in 1965, and translated into 16 languages). The main character of the book, Miss Sylvia Barrett had teenagers of very kind. She coped with them all – noisy, violent, precocious, lovesick, clever, rebellious, likeable! In the process she became America’s favorite school-teacher.
Booker T. Washington (1856 – 1915) – U.S. reformer, educator, author, and lecturer.
Confucius (551 ? B.C. – 478 ? B.C.) – Chinese philosopher and teacher. Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803 – 1882) – U.S. essayist and poet. [7, p.48-50]

статистика