IMPROVEMENTS

Well, I write this Random Thought in the midst of a vortex of emotions.  On one hand, I’m still enveloped by the aura of Lily.  On the other hand, Susie and I are packing up for an early Monday morning flight to Boston to assist with emergency family medical issues.   Needless to say, I’ll be more than distracted.  So, while I can focus my thoughts and feelings swirling around Lily, here goes.

“People-ness” has a very small academic lobby in academia compared to powerful voice of “thingification.”  Yet, we academics don’t check our hearts at the door.  We are heirs to a mass of emotions, perceptions, experiences, memories, pains, influences, to which we react, which shape our perspectives, and which makes sense to us of what’s going on.  That inner nexus creates a dynamic that impacts on attitude and performance and achievement.   We experience the push and pull of thoughts and emotions of satisfaction or irritation, suredness and confusion, answer and question, fear and courage, direction and drift, love or hate, accomplishment or frustration, joy or sadness, focus or distraction, energy and fatigue, and a host of other influences.  All these intertwine to affect our motivation, our perceptions, expectations, and what we will or won’t do from moment to moment.

Consequently, there’s a certain barrenness and destitution when so many of us submit to the influence of “thingification” as we talk of improving teaching.  So many of us see teaching solely in terms of tweaking method and technique, transmission of content, use of technology.  We see change in terms of changing what we do being divorced from changing who we are.  We see the “who” does as irrelevant to the “how” and “what” to do.  We don’t see it in terms of the need to master and use the inner values of “self.”  We talk of thinking about content, understanding subject matter, using technique and method, implementing technology.  We seldom talk of feeling, attitude; we rarely address teaching and learning in terms of virtues and values.  We tend to separate the intellectual from the emotional.

I’d be the first to admit that a learning about the methods and techniques, having knowledge of the content, and utilizing the available technology are important.  We need, however, as Steve Jobs, might say, to intersect humanity with those three.  Just take a look at Carol Dweck’s “fixed mindset” vis-à-vis “growth mindset,” or Clayton Christensen’s  “sustaining innovator” vis-à-vis the “disruptive innovator,” or Sonya Lyubomirsky’s negativity vis-à-vis positivity, or Barbara Fredrickson’s sadness vis-a-vis happiness or Martin Seligman’s pessimism vis-à-vis optimism, or Richard Boyatzis’ dissonance vis-à-vis resonance, or Robert Brooks’ succumbing vis-à-vis overcoming, or Teresa Amabile’s uncreative vis-à-vis creative, or Jon Kabat-Zin’s mindfulness vis-a-vis mindlessness, or Frederick Herzberg’s enrichment or impoverishment, or Mihaly Csikszentmihaly’s enthusiastic flow vis-a-vis  unexcited low, or Ed Deci’s purpose vis-a-vis meaninglessness, fear vis-à-vis fearlessness.   Read their MINDSET, SELF THEORIES, WHEREVER YOU GO, THERE YOU ARE, INNOVATOR’S DILEMMA, FLOURISH, LOVE 2.0, POSITIVITY, LEARNED OPTIMISM, WHY WE DO WHAT WE DO, HOW OF HAPPINESS, RESONANT LEADERSHIP, POWER OF RESILIENCE, FINDING FLOW, MOTIVATION TO WORK, THE PROGRESS PRINCIPLE.  They’re not talking about pedagogy or content or technology.  They all are talking about the fact that it’s always personal.  It’s people’s attitudes, perceptions, and emotions.  It’s people’s values, character, morality, ethics, vision, purpose, meaning.

Sure, pedagogy, content, and technology are important cards in the game, but it is the “me” who turns them into either a winning or losing hand.  It takes wits and hustle; it takes a keeping on; it takes awareness, attentiveness, alertness; it takes seeing with your heart.  Pedagogy, content, and technology are trumped by the power of intent, happiness, fear, anxiety, worry, enthusiasm, “ho-humness,” sadness, well-being, anger, boredom, content, discontent, frustration, elation, fun, vision, purpose, resilience, passion, energy, perseverance, commitment, courage to fail, strength of character, authenticity, openness, vulnerability, fear or fearlessness, caring, belief or disbelief, kindness, rudeness, hope, hopelessness, love, disdain, and all the slings and arrows to which we are heir.

The inner “me” is imperative.  It makes the difference.  It turns adversity into advantage, or advantage into adversity.   It determines if you think, feel, and believe you can or can’t.  We don’t see pedagogy, content, and technology as they are; we see them as we are and how we use them reveals who we are.  Pedagogy, content, and technology are always structured according to somebody’s perceptions, knowledge, attitudes, emotions, and emphases. They may look objective and disinterested, but they are the result of subjective choices all the way from perception, to intent, to selection, to organization, to interpretation, to application.  If we are to get smart about pedagogy, content and technology, we have to get even wiser about and more aware of ourselves and others.  We have to learn about and accept the role the  our emotions play.  We, have to understand that our humanity captains our lives.  Pedagogy, content, or even technology do not.

No, as Teresa Amabile says, our most potentially potent teaching tool is my inner “Me,” who I am and who I can become.  It’s my inner character; my principles and values, my heart and soul, my spirit, my attitude; my emotions; it’s my inner culture that determines my priorities and allocation choices; it’s my level of self-esteem and self-confidence and self-respect; it’s how I define myself; it’s my authenticity and integrity; it’s my avowed purpose in life.  And, as Clayton Christensen says, it’s how I measure my life.

Louis

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About Louis Schmier

LOUIS SCHMIER “Every student should have a person who wants to help him or her help himself or herself become the person he or she is capable of becoming, and I’ll be damned if I am ever going to let one human being fall through the cracks in my classes without a fight.” How about a snapshot of myself. But, what shall I tell you about me? Something personal? Something philosophical? Something pedagogical? Something scholarly? Nah, I'll dispense with that resume stuff. Since I believe everything we do starts from who we are inside, what we believe, what we perceive, and what we do is an extension of ourselves, how about if I first say some things about myself. Then, maybe, I can ease into other things. My name is Louis Schmier. The first name rhymes with phooey, the last with beer. I am a 76 year old - in body, but not in mind or spirit - born and bred New Yorker who came south in 1963. I met by angelic bride, Susie, on a reluctant blind date at Chapel Hill. We've been married now going on 51 years. We have two marvelous sons. One is a VP at Samsung in San Francisco. The other is an artist with food and is an executive chef at a restaurant in Nashville, Tn. And, they have given us three grandmunchkins upon whom we dote a bit. I power walk 7 miles every other early morning. That’s my essential meditative “Just to …” time. On the other days, I exercise with weights to keep my upper body in shape. I am an avid gardener. I love to cook on my wok. Loving to work with my hands as well as with my heart and mind, I built a three room master complex addition to the house. And, I am a “fixer-upper” who allows very few repairmen to step across the threshold. Oh, by the way, I received my A.B. from then Adelphi College, my M.A. from St. John's University, and my Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. I have been teaching at Valdosta State University in Georgia since 1967. Having retired reluctantly in December, 2012, I currently hold the rank of Professor of History, Emeritus. I prefer the title, “Teacher”. Twenty-five years ago, I had what I consider an “epiphany”. It changed my understanding of myself. I stopped professoring and gave up scholarly research and publication to devote all my time and energy to student. My teaching has taken on the character of a mission. It is a journey that has taken me from seeing only myself to a commitment to vision larger than myself and my self-interest. I now believe that being an educator means I am in the “people business”. I now believe that the most essential element in education is caring about people. Education without caring, without a real human connection, is as viable as a person with a brain but without a heart. So, when I am asked what I teach, I answer unhesitatingly, “I teach students”. I am now more concerned with the students’ learning than my teaching, more concerned with the students as human beings than with the subject. I am more concerned with reaching for students than reaching the height of professional reputation. I believe the heart of education is to educate the heart. The purpose of teaching is to instill in all students genuine, loving, lifelong eagerness to learn and foster a life of continual growth and development. It should encourage and assist students in developing the basic values needed for learning and living: self-discipline, self-confidence, self-worth, integrity, honesty, commitment, perseverance, responsibility, pursuit of excellence, emotional courage, creativity, imagination, humility, and compassion for others. In April, 1993, I began to share ME on the internet: my personal and professional rites of passage, my beliefs about the nature and purpose of an education, a commemoration of student learning and achievement, my successful and not so successful experiences, a proclamation of faith in students, and a celebration of teaching. These electronic sharings are called “Random Thoughts”. There are now over 1000 of them floating out there in cyberspace. The first 185, which chronicles the beginnings of my journey, have been published as collections in three volumes, RANDOM THOUGHTS: THE HUMANITY OF TEACHING, RANDOM THOUGHTS, II: TEACHING FROM THE HEART, RANDOM THOUGHTS, III: TEACHING WITH LOVE, and RANDOM THOUGHTS, IV: THE PASSION OF TEACHING. The chronicle of my continued journey is available in an Ebook on Amazon's Kindle in a volume I call FAITH, HOPE, LOVE: THE SPIRIT OF TEACHING. There a few more untitled volumes in the works..

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