As an educator I am glad that I have had the opportunity to touch the lives of my students. I am also very happy that I have had the chance to speak the truth to them about their abilities and point them in the right direction. Here is a story that that I posted on my blog at www.behavior-management.com about the truth.
One of the things that I’ve noticed today in
society is that everyone has a problem with the truth. I don’t mean we walk
around lying all the time, but we are always afraid of hurting someone’s
feelings or becoming entangled in some sort of confrontation with the person we
are speaking with or better yet the person we’re living with. Sometimes we are
concerned about someone’s reaction to us so we bend the truth or poke around
trying to figure out what that person wants to hear. It really starts to become
a problem in personal relationships when couples are afraid to make their desires
known for fear of a break-up or a divorce.
People can have a problem with the truth on the job, when a supervisor
might worry about an employee’s reaction to a poor performance evaluation; in
education a teacher might be worried about a student’s or parent’s reaction,
and then could easily award grades that are not in line with the student’s
performance.
When I was in high school my guidance counselor
called me down to his office and pulled out my grades. He said, “What do you
want to do when you’re through with high school?” I told him that I didn’t
know, and then in the next breath, thinking that I had to tell him something
other than the truth- that I wanted to be a bartender, I told him that I wanted
to be a lawyer. “A lawyer,” he said, pointing to my grades, “These are not
lawyer’s grades. If I were you I would start to think about doing something
else.” I walked out of his office, and
wasn’t the least bit offended. I didn’t even think about going home and telling
my father that my guidance counselor said I wasn’t smart enough to be a
lawyer. I never said one word to my
father. You know what? The guy had actually told me the truth, and the truth
really did set me free. I started to look honestly at my abilities, and I was
able to acknowledge the fact that I hadn’t worked hard academically for my
first three years of high school. I
started to really think about my future realistically. My guidance counselor made me take a hard
look in the mirror, and come to terms with what my abilities and my attitude
really were. He told me the truth, and I appreciated that.
Well, in 1977, my father sold the bar, and I became
a teacher that same year. I really enjoyed teaching. I was a special educator
so I didn’t always have the cream of the crop when it came to my students. In
fact, my students were usually the worst behavior problems in the school and
could really get to me on some days. But
overall I developed relationships with the kids, and things seemed to always go
pretty well. As I progressed in my career I noticed that things were changing.
I was expected to put up with more and more behavior problems, and everyone was
giving me some excuse for a kid’s deviance. The catch phrase that seemed to be
in vogue about 20 years ago was, I really like this kid, but I don’t like his
behavior. Was this the truth? I don’t think so. Is it really possible to like
someone and not like their behavior? The
truth is we don’t like the person because
of his behavior, and people need
to be made aware of this in a considerate way. A person is his behavior, and
the two can’t be separated. I can give you the names of people who are well
known in society for absolute deviance, and you tell me if you like them, but
not their behavior. Let’s try Charles
Manson, Scott Peterson, Jeffrey Dahmer, or even Adolph Hitler. Can anyone not
like their behavior but still like them as people? No, we don’t like them
period. The perception we have of a
person is based on his behavior. The truth is if the behavior is not likeable
we probably will dislike the person. People need to know that if their behavior
doesn’t change, then others won’t want to develop meaningful relationships with
them, and ultimately won’t like them.
Very recently a student came into my office (I was
working as an interim principal) and began to discuss with me what he wanted to
do after he finished high school He wanted to be a doctor That is a terrific
goal for a young person. Well, I asked him what he scored on his SATs. He told
me he scored about a 400 on each section.
I was thinking in my mind that a perfect score is 800 on each section,
and a pretty good score would be about a 650 to 700. I knew something right
then and there; he wasn’t going to be my
doctor. I proceeded to pull his grades out and found that his math and science
grades were C’s and D’s. I of course wanted to respond with the same question
that my guidance counselor asked me. Do these look like a doctor’s grades? But,
based upon the culture and society’s norms I couldn’t ask that question. I
immediately directed this student to the entry requirements that colleges have
for their pre-med program, and ultimately medical school. He discovered the
truth on his own, and came back to me and thanked me for helping him realize
that his study skills needed improvement, and that he needed to take and
re-take the college boards. The truth made him aware of his own weaknesses and
how much harder he was going to have to work in order to achieve his goals.
Society seems to want to withhold the truth and
make everyone believe that they are smarter than what they are and that their
behavior is based upon circumstance, their environment, or lack of therapy or
medication. Facing the truth about my abilities and my work ethic put me on
track and helped me choose a good vocation and helped me to understand how I
needed to improve my work ethic.
Subsequently, instead of floating through life unsuccessfully from one
job to another, I worked hard in college, graduate school, and then as an
employee. So the next time your kids come home and say that their teacher told
them that they have to work harder, or their work is unacceptable, or that
their behavior is unacceptable, or they better consider going to a county
college rather than Dartmouth,
thank that teacher for doing something that is a rarity today- speaking the
truth.
<a href="http://behavioral-management.com">for more about Jim
Burns http://behavioral-management.com/</a>