3.10.2.1 He Himself Be Interested
But before naming these “factors of interestingness,” may we not also name and discuss briefly some other essentials in the matter of creating and maintaining interest?
In the first place it is good to remember that a teacher who would have his pupils interested must himself be interested.
If he would see their faces light up with the glow of enthusiasm, he must be the charged battery to generate the current. Interest begets interest.
It is as contagious as whooping cough—if a class is exposed it is sure to catch it. The teacher who constantly complains of a dull class, very likely is simply facing a reaction to his own dullness or disagreeableness. “Blue Monday” isn’t properly so named merely because of the drowsy pupil.
The teacher inevitably sets the pace and determines the tone of his class. Many a teacher when tired, or out of patience, has concluded a recitation feeling that his pupils were about the most stupid group he has ever faced; the same teacher keyed up to enthusiasm has felt at the close of another recitation that these same pupils could not be surpassed.
A student with whom the writer talked a short time ago remarked that she could always tell whether the day’s class was going to be interesting under a particular teacher as soon as she caught the mood in which she entered the classroom. Half-heartedness, indifference, and unpleasantness are all negative—they neither attract nor stimulate.
With these we can conclude that interest and enthusiasm are the sunshine of the classroom—they are to the human soul what the sun’s rays are to the plant.
Stumble Upon
Del.icio.us
Buzz




No Comments »
No comments yet.
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI
Leave a comment
If you want to leave a feedback to this post or to some other user´s comment, simply fill out the form below.