A FOURTH “ONE THING FOR STUDENTS TO LEARN,” I

Someone asked me why I bother with my “Schmier’s words for the day” since it has nothing to do with course content.  My initial answer was simple, “I believe it has it has everything to do with content; learning, and learning how to use, and to what end to use the content.  I say that if you want students to achieve, as Maslow and a bunch of others said and still say, we should choose to pay attention to and work with students on their attitudes.  That’s what EI and SI are all about.  A student’s attitude affects all aspects of her or his attitude towards learning and their learning no less than it does ours.  Both positive and negative attitudes are catalysts for a whole series of feelings, thoughts, and actions on both sides of the podium.  And, we should not only pay a lot of empathetic attention to students’ attitudes and emotions, but help them learn how to use them in way that is in their interest.  We should help them see that they can live, as do we, by one word:  choice.  We should choose to help them see that they are not helpless, that they each can choose to be up just as they can choose to be down, that they can cast off or be burdened by distracting and paralyzing weights. The choice, no matter what the situation, no matter the difficulty to make it, is always up to them–and us.”

In that vein, let me continue with my batch of “one thing for students to learn.”  This one is such a “biggie” that its going to be a long one.  So, I’ll break it up in a series of reflections.  Here goes.  Usually, on the fourth day of class, while we’re engaging in the “serious fun,” “stress reducing,” connecting community building exercises of “getting to know ya” and “how it works,” I write on the whiteboard a crucial “Schmier’s words for the day” which deal with the one overpowering, heart-stopping, hesitating, paralyzing, acid-producing, nerve-wracking, stomach-upsetting, tearful, muscle-tightening, fearful, eroding emotion on our campuses:   “No one and nothing can stress you without your permission.”

Don’t think debilitating stress is pervasive and rampant?  Look around.  So many people are a mass of stressful tension, thinking that “I’ll be happy, when….”  Yet, because of the way most experience education and the way education is presented, there’s always the Siren, the goddess of the “rat race,” with another beckoning “when”:  assignments, tests, grades, GPAs, honors, finances, personal stuff; tenure, promotion, research, publication, grants, recognitions, awards, personal stuff.  Almost everyone is frantically and fearfully, and usually unhappily, scurrying around physically or mentally, and/or emotionally, like Alice’s out of breath, stressed-out, hustling white rabbit.

Think of how many people surrender themselves to blaming “so and so made me do it,” or disenfranchise themselves with “such and such is stressing me,” or enslave themselves with “I have no choice, but to….” They feel so alone.  They feel so stuck.  They feel so powerless.  They feel so lost.   Yet, they’re not alone.  And, they’re not impotent.  If nothing else, they are there with themselves.  And, there’s an untapped power within themselves.  The truth is that they themselves are the source of inhibiting and crippling anxiety, and they themselves are the source of inner peacefulness.  The truth is that they are their own tuning fork.  These have the power to do right by their day.

In the course of our conversations, I tell the students something like “Let me tell you something about stress and happiness that I’ve learned from my epiphany in 1991, my cancer in 2004, and my cerebral hemorrhage three years later: every moment is a choice, and all those choices add up to what kind of day you’re going to have, and they, in turn, add up to what of life–and whose life–you’re going to live.”  We usually talk about how choices will either suck the air out of us or let the air out of all the pressures we feel.

So, in the course of our brief conversation I let students know that I truly believe that an important part of getting an education is learning the meaning of the serenity prayer:  “Lord, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and wisdom to know the difference.”  We talk about how stress is the result of not knowing how to accept and live that prayerful difference.

“When you do, as I did, and am still doing,” I say to them, “you’ll understand why it’s not called the “serenity prayer” for nothing.  It teaches those willing to learn how to be active on the outside, but calm on the inside.  Sure, let the outside stuff inspire you, motivate you, educate you.  Let it push you, but don’t let that stuff push you over the cliff.  Let it drive you, but don’t let it drive you nuts.  Let the outer you be engaged and involved; at the same time let the inner you put everything in its proper place.”

They hear me say, “You know, You can’t proclaim a thunderous ‘wow’ when your inner voice is whispering an ‘ugh’ and expect anything other throwing yourself off balance.  What do you expect when your tongue and lips form a ‘yes’ and your gut says a ‘no.’  It’s like they’re at war with each other and that’ll leave you with a spiritual acid reflux.  And, then, you’ll only get an emotional ulcer, and maybe a physical one as well.  I learned that to be active on the outside while being fully at peace inside is the most powerful way to live and the best way to achieve anything.  Your strength to face whatever is thrown at each of us only comes from both your will and won’t power.   Let’s work on it.”

For a start, I told them, “No grades.”  More later.

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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