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The Teacher or the
"Teacher-Type"
Dr. Jack Hyles
Electronic Printing by FFEP
``My pastor is not very interesting as a speaker. He
is more the `teacher-type.' ''This little statement was made to me by a lady
with whom I was talking about the Lord's work. This statement is typical of
many similar ones which I hear from coast t o coast. If a person is
uninteresting, he is the ``teacher-type.'' If a speaker is boring, he must
be a teacher. If a speaker is able to speak in terms that the hearer cannot
understand, he is the ``teacher-type.'' It seems that to many, teaching is
the ability to confuse the hearer so that he will leave the room amazed at
the brilliance of the teacher. It might be wise to examine just what
teaching really is.
1. Teaching is the transfer of knowledge. To many, it
is considered the displaying of knowledge. Teaching is not the taking out of
one's knowledge and displaying it in the presence of the hearer. Teaching is
the hearer leaving with knowledge with which the speaker entered. Unless the
hearer leaves knowing what the speaker knew when he came, the teaching
process has not taken place. This would indicate that many times the pupil
fails does so, at least partially, because the teacher has failed. Some
speakers and professors appear to think that it would be plagiarism for the
student to learn what the instructor knows. The teacher has failed when the
student does not leave knowing what the teacher knew when he entered.
Teaching, in a sense, is transferring profound truth into simplicity so that
it in turn may be transferred into profound work.
2. Teaching is a transfer of personality. The pupil
should not only learn what the teacher knows; he should also, in a sense,
become what the teacher is. Teaching is not only the transferring of
knowledge, it is the transferring of zeal, hones ty, enthusiasm, optimism,
generosity, and other traits that a good teacher possesses. This transfer of
personality cannot be made if there is no teacher. This is one of the
weaknesses of correspondence courses and similar forms of education. Most of
us, as we think back over our childhood and youth, can remember far more of
what our teachers were like than we can of what our teachers taught.
3. Teaching is the transfer of procedure. Not only
should the pupil learn the facts and how to adorn them with the right
personality, but he should learn propriety, procedure, neatness, and
orderliness if he is to be taught properly. Such lessons can be learned from
a neat room, a clean building, an orderly presentation, and proper
organization and discipline.
4. Teaching is an incarnation of ideas. Most people
cannot define such things as loyalty and patriotism. They can, however,
point to someone who has these qualities.
It is easier to learn loyalty from a loyal person than
from a lecture on loyalty. Hence, the right teacher would incorporate these
ideals and others into his personality and character so that the pupil can
emulate him and reach the desired end.
5. Teaching is the ability to inspire learning. Good
teaching makes learning easy and, to some degree, fun. Again, this puts not
only the burden of teaching on the teacher but also the burden of learning
and places the responsibility of failure on the teacher's shoulders as well
as the student's.
May the dear Lord deliver us from being the
``teacher-type.'' May we be more concerned about making our pupils the
``learning-type.''
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