Is your classroom a calm, relaxing day or a violent, destructive storm? Is it sunny, cloudy or rainy? Is it frigidly cold? Are you a calm, refreshing breeze or a tornado?
Metaphors can be powerful reflective tools that allow us to see common everyday experiences in a new light. Metaphors have a compactness about them, packing lots of information into a small space, like that of our climate metaphor. They also have the ability to go below the surface and hit at a deeper level of knowing. Last of all, metaphors are particularly vivid and powerful because they arouse emotions in us.
Too often educators use violent metaphors to describe their work. "We're in the trenches." "We're on the front lines of the battle." "School is a prison." These violent metaphors can be self-fulfilling prophecies that impact our relationship with students and the tone of classroom management in our classrooms.
Let's listen as teachers introduce some of their metaphors that come from places of caring, nurturing and hope.
First, middle school teacher Melodi Patterson introduces her personal teaching metaphor — that of a tailor.
Look For:
Next, listen as high school teacher Marcos Torres describes his personal metaphor for teaching — a greenhouse.
Look For:
Go Deeper:
Individually
Engage in a 10-minute free-write exploring a metaphor that captures your approach to teaching. Consider sharing your reflections with Teaching Tolerance by email at editor@tolerance.org [1] or by mail: Teaching Tolerance, 400 Washington Avenue, Montgomery, AL 36104.
As a Group Activity
Introduce the activity to the group — that you're going to explore diverse approaches to teaching through metaphors. Allow participants at least 10 minutes to engage in a free-write. At the end of the writing period, ask volunteers to share their metaphors. Show the videos of Patterson and Torres as examples or as supplements to the groups' metaphors. Write each metaphor on a large sheet of paper or a chalkboard where everyone can see them. As a group, discuss:
Ready Resources:
Develop Your Own Metaphor
Explore a slideshow on teaching metaphors [3] by Ron Marken.
Links:
[1] mailto:editor@tolerance.org
[2] http://www.learner.org/channel/workshops/nextmove/metaphor/
[3] http://www.usask.ca/gmcte/slides/ppt_ron_marken/sld002.htm