I come from a family of teachers. My sister and I are
teachers and my father was a teacher. I have 1 cousin and 3 aunts who are
teachers. My Grandfather was a teacher.
My Grampa started teaching in the late 1920s in a small
farming community in Interior BC. He taught in the quintessential one room
schoolhouse- it is now little more than a pile of bricks in the corner of a
farmer’s field. When the Depression hit, he lost students to the farm- they
were needed to help earn the few extra pennies for the family. My Grampa made
house calls to check on these students and to tutor and teach them in the small
windows of time that they had. The families, if they could, repaid him with the
fruits of their labour. He was RESPECTED!
After the Depression he moved back to the city and began
teaching in the high school from which he graduated. He was a Botany, Biology
and Latin teacher and quickly became much-loved amongst the staff and students.
His classes were legendary. He was RESPECTED!
This year, while chatting with the Grandma of one of my students,
we discovered that my Grandpa had been her favourite teacher. It has been an
honour for me to teach the grandson of someone who had been taught by my
Grandpa. We both burst into tears as our worlds collided and we talked about
what a wonderful educator, mentor and friend he had been. He was RESPECTED!
My father began teaching in the 1960s at a time when men
were just beginning to enter the education system en masse. Over the years, he
was branded as the teacher who could reach “the tough kids.” His classrooms
were packed with the behaviour problems, the depressed children, the children
that needed extra love and support. His mantra was “You can’t save them all,
but you can try!” He had former students coming to visit him all the time. He
was RESPECTED!
At my aunt’s memorial service last year, there were several
students present. One spoke about all of the personal sacrifices my aunt made
so that tat student and her peers felt respected, loved and valued. She had
perfected her job yet was always looking for ways to be a better teacher and
mentor. My aunt sacrificed herself for these students. She was RESPECTED!
It is time that we all stood up for fairly funded public
education!
It is time that students, education and teachers are
RESPECTED by our government!
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