Yesterday, I fell into an old habit of
capricious behavior in class, and I’m not happy about it. One dictionary
defines “caprice” as a sudden, unpredictable action, change, or series of
actions or changes, as in “A hailstorm in July is a caprice of nature” –and I
guess you could say I caused a small hailstorm in my classroom today. A girl
simply tried to tell another girl about the previous night’s assignment, and,
without warning, I snapped at her and ordered her to be quiet. It was totally
unlike me, and I think both girls were stunned by it. It was capricious conduct
of the most brainless kind – the kind of conduct that I find embarrassing and
disappointing. As a teacher, I have tried, above all, to be a stable and
composed person when I’m with my students. Young people need to be in the
presence of adults who have the noiseless strength of a relentless but
smooth-flowing river. They don’t need to be around hasty, fitful people whose
behavior is as whimsical as the wind. Yesterday, for a few moments with those
girls, I was an untrustworthy, impulsive teacher, and I’m not pleased about it.
As I’m typing this paragraph, I’m wishing I could get back to the classroom right
now and behave in a more self-possessed manner. I’ll have to wait, though,
for today’s classes, when I hope my students will see a steadier, more even-tempered teacher.
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