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My Teaching Philosophy - (A Work In Progress) As a public school
teacher, I feel I have the responsibility to help impart meaning into
the lives of children. To not only educate future generations on
facts and figures, but to help them understand why they need to know
and understand the world around them and where they fit in to this
greater picture. Children need to know where we've come from in order
to learn from our past collective experiences as the United States
and the world, to know what does not work, and what does. So as an
educator in America, it is important to provide children with the
opportunity to apply meaning to their lives in the context of their
learning. I believe if it is possible to do that, children will
naturally become interested in pursuing learning throughout their
lives in order to better understand themselves and the ever-changing
world around them.
Along with the
federal and state curriculum standards, public schools need to
provide students with models of good behavior, good citizenship, how
to work well with others, and compassion and respect for others. As a
childhood educator, I will be in the role to provide not only the
foundation of learning for children, but to foster these universal
values and to provide an example of how to interact positively with
others and how to live a good life with compassion and have a
responsibility for our world. These characteristics or traits are
essential for students to learn and apply to the real world outside
of the classroom, which is where they all end up sooner or later. Why
not teach children the important life skills that will help them to
be successful in any field of work or part of the world? Why not
teach children to be good, kind people? To live in a world full of
compassionate, respectful, responsible people would be a utopia! Yes,
there will always be those who make decisions and choices that don't
follow along the aforementioned lines of character and seek out
selfish and malevolent endeavors. But the important thing to remember
is that to stand up to those malevolent individuals would be the many
people who've been “armed” with well-meaning and positive
dispositions.
The first learning
environment for children will always be their home. The base of their
experiences that make up who they are before entering school will
have occurred outside of the classroom walls, and that needs to be
acknowledged. Everyone has different values that they are brought up
with, but it is an important feature in the classroom to provide
instruction and modeling in what I consider universal values.
Universal values do not create bias and they do not create divisions
among people. Instead, they develop closer-knit communities made up
of compassionate citizens.
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