That Special Teacher
For many of us there has been that special teacher, the one who made the biggest difference. There have been several special teachers for me, but one who shines above the rest, so this week’s blog is about her and a few other experiences in my own education.
My first school held no such person for me. I hated being there and, if I remember correctly, was not there for too long. The saving factor was that my two closest childhood friends were there with and and we moved together to the next school. I have vague memories of some super teachers at my Primary School – Mrs Nichols, who took us to the Robert Mayor concerts at the Festival Hall and my 4th year teacher (now called year 6), whose name I can’t recall but who I remember reading to us such books as Stig of the Dump and Charlie and the Chocolate factory.
Most of my Primary education was spent in a bit of a blur, never quite catching up or knowing what was going on around me. I had no idea then that I was dyslexic, and that other children knew what was going on as they understood the timetable to the right of the classroom door. My only strong memory of the infant school (besides standing on a bench for what seemed like hours when I was an angel in the Nativity play) was of being kept in at break time to read the flash cards while my friends played outside within plain view and almost within touching distance. Never could read those words! I remember being good at spelling tests but unable to spell words in any other situation. I remember loving the wonderful patterns we would make for handwriting practice. But my real memories of school started at secondary school.
There were several special teachers there: Mrs Fry, the patient Maths teacher; Mrs Barnes, the Art teacher who managed to really teach me to draw; but most special of all was Mrs Herlihy (no idea if that’s the correct spelling). She was my 3rd Year English teacher – we’d now call that Year 9. Up until she taught us, I lived in dread of English lessons. We used to have to ‘read around the class’. This meant that we each took turns in reading a paragraph – a living hell for me. I would count the people who came before me; work out the paragraph that I would be asked to read; rehearse the reading silently until it was my turn; read; then finally sit back and breathe. This meant that I had no idea of what we’d actually been reading, so I would have to re-read it at home and read ahead at home in order to keep up and cope. Not knowing that I was dyslexic I just assumed that I was somewhat thick.
Then there was the writing. How was I expected to think of what to write about as well as how to write it? How to make it neat and how to spell the words? Always easier to dumb down the vocabulary to words that were easier to spell. Mrs Herlihy changed all of that in one lesson. It was really simple. We were learning about rhyming couplets and the task was to then tell a story written in rhyming couplets. So how did she make this doable? A really simple technique that I have used and adapted time and again since becoming an English teacher. She told us to take a story we already knew, something simple like a fairy tale, and retell it written in rhyming couplets. This simple act of taking away the thinking up a story element of the task allowed me to focus on one thing only – the rhyming couplets. I got an A. An A in English! This gave me a confidence that I had hitherto never felt and started my love of the subject. Then she introduced me to Jane Eyre, To Kill a Mockingbird and One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich; books that were to open me up to a love of reading. Whilst my reading was slow, I never felt stupid in her lessons. I don’t remember being made to read aloud, but I remember her patiently discussing the books and sharing ideas. She inspired me to be an English teacher, but more than that, she helped me to see that adapting the way we teach can help the learning.
At the time I didn’t know that was what she was doing any more than she did; but when I started teaching it was her lessons that came to mind and her techniques that got me started. I found myself breaking down tasks so that the focus could be on what I wanted the learning to be for that lesson. There were times when the focus was in finding the tale to tell; but if the focus was in writing in the style of a newspaper report then the story could be that of The Three Little Wolves and the Big, Bad Pig. If the writing style was discursive, then we would have a debate first, a come over to my side session of persuasion, so that once again, for those children who needed to focus only on the style of writing, the subject matter had already been explored.
We never know who we will influence or how. I doubt if Mrs Herlihy has a clue how influential she was in my life, but I do know that the best and the worst experiences that we have at school live on in us. I remember the torture of the flash card reading lessons at break time (even though they were well-intentioned as I needed to learn to read), so have always avoided taking children from an activity that they enjoy in order to give them support or carry out assessments. I talk to the children first and agree with them a suitable time for catch ups, support or assessments. I remember Mrs Herlihy, and have tried to teach in ways that enable my charges to feel proud of their achievements.
I may not have told her personally, but I send out a thank you to Mrs Herlihy and all the other teachers who showed me patience, kindness and understanding as I navigated the stormy waters of education.
