<h2 class="nobreak" id="iii"><span class="tint">iii</span><br/> <span class="subhead">A Word to Prospective Teachers about Putting the Most into their Work</span></h2></div>
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<p class="drop-cap-image"><span class="idcfirst">The</span> large problem of the teacher
is not to impart knowledge and
maintain discipline. The larger
problem is to bring school life and
real life into closer contact. With
the average teacher, as with the average student,
there is very little connection between
the school and life as it is actually lived every
day outside the school-room; and as long as
this is true there will be ground for reasonable
and just criticism.</p>
<p>In the primary school, the intermediary school
and the high school there is often little, if
any, connection between life as it is lived in the
shop, on the farm, in business and in the home.
It cannot but prove of mutual advantage if the
teacher can bring school life into actual touch
with the life of the people about him. The interest
of the parents will be increased just in
proportion as they find that the teacher is
making his instruction stimulate and vitalize<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span>
conditions outside the school-room.</p>
<p>It is difficult for the parent of the country
child to note the results of education through
the usual processes and channels of knowledge.
Colored parents depend upon seeing the
results of education in ways not true of the
white parent. It is important then that the colored
teacher in this generation should give
special attention to bringing school life into
closer touch with real life. Any education is to
my mind “high” which enables the individual
to do the very best work for the people by
whom he is surrounded. Any education is “low”
that does not make for character and effective
service.</p>
<p>The average teacher in the public schools is
very likely to yield to the temptation of thinking
that he is educating an individual when he is
teaching him to reason out examples in Arithmetic,
to prove propositions in Geometry and
to recite pages of History. He conceives this to
be the end of education. Herein is the sad deficiency
in many teachers who are not able to
use History, Arithmetic, Geometry as means
to an end. They get the idea that the student
who has mastered a certain number of pages
in a text-book is educated, forgetting that text-books
are at best but tools, and in many cases<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span>
ineffective tools, for the development of man.
Modern educators are getting more and more
away from books. Now this will be hard for
the average teacher who has worked out all
the problems in Arithmetic and proved them by
the answers in the book, but I believe that
the best educational thought tends toward the
study of real things and not mere books.</p>
<p>One of the ways of bringing the school into
closer touch with society is to make school surroundings,
including the grounds and buildings,
as homelike and as attractive as possible.
The school-rooms are in too many cases cold
and barren. In schools of this sort there is little
connection between the home and the school. I
believe that the teacher should study the home
surroundings of his pupils and become more
intimately acquainted with the parents. When
teachers are able to make their school-rooms
inviting and are able to project their influence
into the home life of the pupils, there will be
few absentees or truants. A child cannot be expected
to leave a comfortable, attractive and
convenient home to go into a dull, inconvenient,
uncomfortable school-room, nor can it be expected
that pupils will leave comfortable chairs
at home and go into school-rooms where they
must sit on stools with their feet six or eight<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span>
inches from the floor.</p>
<p>It is hardly necessary to say that the teacher
should set the example for the student in the
matter of cleanliness and neatness. The teacher
who would preach against grease spots, rents
in clothes and buttonless jackets must see to
it that he is himself without fault in these respects.
When I go into a school and notice that
the instructor has buttons off his coat, I am at
once convinced that he is not the right teacher.
I do not believe that there is much that the
student can learn at that school that can be
put into practice in real life. I believe that the
teacher should not only set an example himself,
but that he should go further than this:
he should see that every boy and girl in his
school is familiar with the practical applications
of soap and water, and knows the work
of the tooth-brush and the darning-needle.
Some parents may at first resent this encroachment
upon their special domain, but persistence
in an endeavor of this sort will finally
cause the parents to look upon the teacher as
a new force in the community. The average
parent cannot appreciate how many examples
Johnny has worked that day, how many questions
in History he has answered; but when he
says, “Mother, I cannot go back to that school<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>
until all the buttons are sewed on my coat,”
the parent will at once become conscious of
school influence in the home. This will be the
best kind of advertisement. The button propaganda
tends to make the teacher a power in
the community. A few lessons in applied Chemistry
will not be amiss. Take grease spots, for
example. The teacher who with tact can teach
his pupils to keep even threadbare clothes
neatly brushed and free from grease spots is
extending the school influence into the home
and is adding immeasurably to the self-respect
of the home.</p>
<p>In the school-houses in the city, and in many
of the larger towns and country districts, janitors
do all the work of cleaning. This may
be necessary in city schools, where it is not
possible for the children to do all the work of
beautifying and cleaning the school building,
but when all this work is done by outsiders
the children are robbed of part of their instruction
and they thus lose a very important lesson
in cleanliness and order which it is the duty of
the teacher to give. Think of the time lost in
the average family looking for the broom when
the time comes to sweep the floor. At this time
all business suspends. Mother cries out first,
“Where is the broom?” The older sister cries<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span>
to John and Susie and Jane, “Where is the
broom?” and that kind of thing goes on every
day in the week and year. It takes the average
family from ten to twelve minutes every day to
find the broom. Now, we should teach a different
lesson in our schools. We can teach in the
first place that there are two ways for the
broom to be put up, a proper and an improper
way. We can teach the children that there is a
place for the dust-pan and the dust-cloth and
the match-box. The match-box is another thing
that suspends business. Every night when the
matches are wanted, everything goes helter-skelter.
This is a larger problem than the
broom, there being absolutely no light on the
subject. The children should be taught that
there must be a definite place for the broom
and for the match-box, and it is surprising how
quickly these lessons will be taken from the
school-room into the home. Even the listless
parents will be roused to interest by such practical
teaching. The child who goes to school in
a room that is clean and attractive will not long
be content to live in a home that is dirty and
disorderly.</p>
<p>I was recently in a school-room in South Carolina.
The teacher had a reputation for being
a well-fitted instructor, and I expected much<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span>
of him. He was teaching the children by the
latest methods. The children sang well, they
recited their lessons well, but the fact that one
third of the plastering was missing made the
greatest impression on me. I could not detect
the slightest attempt on the part of the teacher
or students to see that the plastering was restored.
I should have suspended school a day
or two until the plastering could be replaced,
rather than teach day after day by silent approval
a lesson of disorder. If the teacher is
careless, the pupils will accept his standards
and go through life in an indifferent, slipshod
manner. If from the first day they enter school
they are surrounded with object lessons of order
and cleanliness, more will have been done
to educate them in a large and helpful way
than if they had centred their interest in books
alone.</p>
<p>Order and beauty are sacrificed in many of our
schools because one third or one fourth of the
window-glass is out. Sometimes I have seen
obsolete hats and discarded dresses doing duty
in the absence of window-glass or window-panes
knocked out in order that the stovepipe
might be run through the broken place. The
child never outlives the impression made by
such a sight. The parents will join their children<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span>
in helping to patch broken plastering if
the teacher will take the lead. When the plastering
is mended, a few pictures should be
placed on the walls, and in this work the parents’
coöperation can be depended upon. Teachers
must put not less conscience but more
thought into the work for the children to whose
lives they are giving direction. By putting into
their work more of their better selves, more
of their personality, teachers will add not only
to their own happiness and usefulness, but will
be doing real work toward hastening the coming
of that kingdom for which they daily pray.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span></p>
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