It’s college graduation season. The Beloved Spouse and I connected
with The Sole Heir to see her beau graduate from St. Mary’s College of Maryland
on Saturday.
I love spending time on college campuses. High schools, for
that matter. Middle and elementary schools. For all their faults, those are the
places where Learning lives, and there is no more noble aspiration for any
human than to learn. It doesn’t matter what, or why. Learning for the sheer
hell of it is among the handful of things that separates us from the other
animals, Celebrate it.
The Sole Heir and The Sole Heir’s Beau attended school in
Montgomery County MD, widely accepted as having among the best schools in the
country. (TSHB attended a private school that was no slouch itself.) My high
school had a few Advanced Placement courses and a smattering of honors, but a
school of less than a thousand students in a town of about 13,000 in a
faltering early 70s economy didn’t have the resources to do much more. This did
not in any dilute the value of my time there.
What matters in any educational environment, more than
facilities and programs and supplies—all of which are important—are teachers.
Watching Cosmos the other day, I got
to thinking of how I gained my enthusiasm for certain things and not others.
Natural skills and inclinations played a part, of course, but in each case I
could point to a teacher who sparked an interest in me that burns to this day.
I’m sure none of them are still teaching, and several may well be gone
altogether, but that doesn’t mean karma will ignore calling them out.
Jim Lagoon, band. He goes first, because it was he who peeled
back the first layers of the opinion that which led to a Master’s degree in
trumpet performance. Among the proudest days of my teaching career were those
when I subbed for Jim, or for someone else and spent time with him, as was
treated as a peer.
Paul Shiring, chemistry. His chemistry classes indirectly sparked
my interest in physics, acoustics, astronomy, meteorology, and natural sciences
in general. Watching a balloon expand in a Bell jar as he created a vacuum, or
seeing what happened when two innocuous chemicals were placed in conjunction
with each other—no way to stop it once it starts—impressed on me the idea that
Nature runs things, and always has more to show us.
Joe Boario, history. He never lectured; he told stories. All
of them true, all of them fascinating. Mr. Boario showed how things are
connected so I knew history rhymed before I ever read Mark Twain’s comment.
Finding the pattern, the relevant historical thread, has served me well in an
era where recent history is too rarely taught.
Bill Eberhardt (civics) and Bob Jones (Problems of
Democracy). Both taught largely through discussion and debate and made fascinating
content that is often perceived as dry as dust. I still remember our eighth-grade
class’s discussion of eminent domain. (“You mean if two old senile people have
a house and they want to build a road there…”)
Lee Herps, social studies. I didn’t appreciate Mr. Herps in
eleventh grade; none of us did. Later, when I understood he wasn’t teaching us
things to remember, but yardsticks by which to measure, I wished I’d paid
better attention. Herps should have taught college; he was wasted on high
school kids.
Dudley Risher and Marko Arezina, algebra. Math is in
everything, and they taught me not to be intimidated by it, but to embrace the
fact, because it meant anything could be figured out.
Karen Baldwin, psychology. Probably a hippie, though most
Burrell students—such as me—would be too square to recognize it. I think she
only lasted one year at Burrell, but in that small window I learned there were
more ways to think about things than I had considered.
Last and obviously not least, Larry Seeley, English and
creative writing. I knew he was special when he asked the class why it takes
Hamlet so long to kill Claudius after speaking with the ghost. After a spirited
discussion, Seeley waved us off and said, “If Hamlet walks right down and kills
his uncle, the play is fifteen minutes long. No one would pay to see that.” Then he spent the time to show us how
successful writing appeals on multiple levels, and that entertainment can be
enlightening, and uplifting content can be entertaining. I wrote my first story
in his class, after he learned I’d discovered Mickey Spillane and suggested
writing a PI story.
I wish I’d thought of doing this twenty years ago, when It
might have mattered more—or at all—to these teachers. I didn’t, and that’s on
me. Wherever they are, I hope they garnered even half as much satisfaction from
teaching as their students benefitted from their efforts, whether we knew it or
not, or wished to acknowledge it. Stopping my inventory here doesn’t mean
teachers stopped influencing my life after high school—far from it—these are
the people who teed me up to be ready for what the others had waiting.
Thank you.
1 comment:
I am glad your teacher meant so much to you. It means a lot to them to know this.
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