I have to go back into a wound that
really hurts to write about power. It’s
painful to think about what I gave up and the prestige that went with being a
super teacher. I enjoyed being popular
with parents, students, and administration.
I loved being the crazy science teacher who knew how to make a pickle
glow like a light bulb or put a skewer through a balloon at parent orientation.
At graduation I was mentioned as a favorite teacher. One Principal told me that he went not
hesitate to put me in any grade in the school because he knew I would do a good
job.
My students learned about the
History of Science through lecture and replicating some of the famous
principles that were discovered through the ages.
I started with the Greeks and
Archimedes with his water displacement theory. We worked our way through Galileo and falling
objects to Newton, Einstein, and beyond.
It took me two years to get through a curriculum of my own making with
my husband and me test driving the demonstrations and labs before I taught them.
This all changed when I realized my
students needed a better curriculum and a teacher with more education. I was self-taught and being asked questions I
could not answer; I did not understand the mathematical formulas in the new
curriculum.
I moved to elementary and taught
fifth and then third grade. I loved
teaching math, science, Bible and social studies. I thought I was doing a great job and I worked
25 hours a week.
Fortune’s wheel has a way of
changing. During this time our family
was dealing with a major illnesses, death of a beloved grandparent, and my
husband’s job loss. I did not know that
I was being considered for termination.
I got the bad news, protested
loudly, and was rehired 24 hours later, but honest to goodness, that one day
tanked 28 great years of teaching. I now
knew what it was like to lose security, prestige, and mental and physical
health.
I came back and taught one more
year. I was scared and unsure. The place I loved, nurtured, and the school I
considered part of my family was no longer safe. I resigned at the end of the year before I
was put on probation and possible termination.
I have no doubt that at 57 I could
go back in the elementary grades and be a terrific teacher. What I cannot face is the meetings,
expectations, paper work and the pressure to be a pleaser to a diverse group of
people.
I thought I never had a power
problem until so much was stripped away. Power and prestige is something I look at every
day and remind myself that I do not want to intentionally hurt another
person. The cost is too great.