Building a Learning Attitude — Hope
Perhaps you have a person like this in your classes. A person who believes that struggle means that the other person has not done their job. A person who gets discouraged because problems come up that are not her fault. A person who believes that 20 years of completion means that they have shown sufficient achievement.
In fact, I am sure that most of us have a member of our math faculty like this (or several).
Yes, the description is for a faculty member. She has asked me what I do when students will not contribute in class, and what to do with behavior problems; she has shared frustrations with students who don’t do their part. In some ways, the New Life project exists for faculty like this, as a way to give hope and engage all faculty.
“If you want to make peace with your enemy, you have to work with your enemy. Then he becomes your partner.” (Nelson Mandela)
We want progress. Progress is not measured by the 50 exceptional programs; progress is measured by what all of our students experience. We face a challenge much less complex than President Mandela did when apartheid was ended in South Africa; to make progress, he knew that all people must be included in the work. To exclude a group just meant to exchange places with them, and prevent progress.
“We Have Met The Enemy and He Is Us” (Walt Kelly, “Pogo”)
The only way to make progress is together. We need the discouraged and cynical faculty, just as they need us. They need our hope for a better future, and we need them so progress is real, and has a chance of lasting. To exclude people from our work is to reduce our probability of success. Inclusion means dialogue, even when uncomfortable. We share values about mathematics, though we may have different perspectives based on our experiences.
Do not give up on other faculty. Keep up a dialogue.
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