Is it just Me, or are you, too, in awe of the courage shown by teachers
at those dreadful times when life’s lessons are best taught and learned?
I know millions agree with me on
this – how could they not…
Here to share a personal perspective
on this topic is Michael Josephson…Michael writes:
Teachers and Tornadoes
Once I got past the awe of
witnessing Mother Nature’s astonishing power to wreak devastation in
Oklahoma, I was awed by something more positive and uplifting: the instinctive
capacity of our species to care about, come to the aid of, and — for those
caught in the middle of the calamity — to even sacrifice their own lives
for others.
Every day we are surrounded by
examples of the dark side of human nature — selfishness, greed, dishonesty
and cruelty — which make it hard to resist cynicism. It’s a pity that it
often takes a disaster and the heroic actions it evokes to provide
compelling contrary evidence, to remind us of the best in human nature.
How can one resist tears hearing
of the teachers in Oklahoma who put themselves at risk by shielding
children with their own bodies? I suspect lots of other adults would have
reacted in a similar fashion, but I think teachers really are special.
With the current focus on competence
and accountability in education, we tend to undervalue one of the most
important qualities of most teachers: their genuine sense of responsibility
and affection for the children they teach.
Over and over we’ve seen the
powerful instinct of teachers to protect children in school shootings and,
more recently, in the horrific tornadoes.
Teachers willingly and without
hesitation treated children as their own and put themselves at risk to
protect them.
It should be a comfort to
parents to know how much teachers really care.
Henry Adams once said, “Teachers
affect all eternity. You never know where their influence stops.” He was
referring to the way they shape lives by transmitting information and
learning skills, but teachers often do so much more. Though only rarely
called upon to risk their lives, they regularly touch the lives of students
with their commitment and love.
It’s been said that kids don’t
care what you know unless they know that you care. Let’s do all we can to
commend, congratulate and celebrate teachers who show how much they care.
Remember, character
counts.
So IS it just me,
or do you, too, agree with Michael and millions of others who owe a debt of
gratitude that can never be repaid to all those who teach our children, who
guard and protect them, who love them as if they were their own; so much so
as to lay down their life for them!
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