Tag Archive for: TeachBeyond’s Values

Partnering with Others

Cooperative learning is widely recognised as valuable for students, but cooperative teaching isn’t so widely valued. It seems to be easier to visualise how working with others and sharing gifts and resources can benefit other people, but sometimes our personal habits of autonomy and independence can keep us, as teachers, from seeing the value of partnerships.

Educational partnerships are an excellent way to model a humble spirit that acknowledges that God has designed people to work in dependence on Him and in cooperation with others. The New Testament uses the metaphor of a body to describe our relationship to Christ and everyone who is a child of God. Everyone is needed, although different parts of the body have different roles. Partnerships are concrete expressions of this kind of inter-relationship.

There is a temptation to function as if we didn’t need the gifts of others, but the Bible is clear that the Holy Spirit doesn’t give all His gifts to any one person. No one can contribute more than a fraction of what is needed in any situation and there is always a temptation to think too highly of ourselves. The more an individual has, the harder it is to recognise that without Christ—and the rest of His Body—we can do nothing. Partnerships recognise our dependence in specific situations, demonstrating to a watching world that our interdependence is more than a theoretic construct.

Educational partnerships can take many different forms including small group accountability, classroom observation, team teaching, multi-class assignments or projects, professional development workshops, and many more. Each form has different levels of risk and different kinds of relationship, but all require an individual to work with others to be successful. Some partnerships will be easier than others, but it is likely that all will require committed effort to move beyond an initial period of discomfort or awkwardness. Partnerships are great ideas, but they are no magic solution to minimise the amount of work that is necessary. Working with others requires us to learn about them—and ourselves—as we navigate a project together. As anyone who has run a three-legged race can tell you, working in sync with others doesn’t come automatically. And when we add crossing cultures to the mix, the learning curve steepens.

The key to success is recognising the benefits of partnership and then committing to the process through all its stages from the “honeymoon” through difficulties to maturity and fruitfulness. But for any sort of a partnership to occur, we have to risk taking that first step. Here are some ideas to get started:

  • Develop a small group of colleagues and/or friends with whom you share struggles and successes. You can get used to talking about what happens in your classroom and will likely gain important insights as you verbalise your experiences and hear the experiences and insights of others in the group.
  • Have someone observe your teaching. This requires more vulnerability, but there is also more objectivity since you aren’t filtering the reports and the observer can see in your blind spots.
  • Team teaching can bring the strengths of multiple teachers together, but it is easier to do this for short, focused units rather than planning to use this for a whole year.
  • Collaborate on a topic or even a specific assignment like a history of science essay that involves history, language arts, and science teachers in the evaluation. This can help students gain a more integrated picture of what they are learning without changing a lot of instructional strategies, so it might be considered a good “starter” partnership.
  • Share your experience and insights with others in a workshop. You’ll learn in the preparation and interaction and they will benefit from the journey God has taken you on.

Every gift given by the Holy Spirit is not for our personal well-being, but for the service of others. This is as true of our teaching as every other area of our lives.  It is a lot harder to draw attention to God’s goodness and greatness when we are working successfully “on our own.” Even if we aren’t consciously drawing attention to our personal goodness and greatness, it is harder for others to see our dependence if we’re working without visible support. Taking the time to consciously develop collaborative partnerships is a concrete way we can demonstrate this dependence for a watching world. And as we know, our students are always watching.

Harold Klassen
Teacher Education Services
TeachBeyond


Photo Credits:   Holding HandsPexels.  Pixaby. ccTeacher Collaboration.Sullivan, Laurie.10 Dec. 2014.  Flicker. cc.

Harold and his wife, Betty, have served with TeachBeyond since 1977. From 1998 to the present Harold has been an educational consultant working with teachers worldwide. He has written a book, The Visual Valet: Personal Assistant for Christian Thinkers and Teachers, and his website, www.transformingteachers.org, has resources to help equip teachers for Christ-centered, transformational education.

Love for Others, God’s Way.

Susan was distracted all morning. Not her normal self, she couldn’t seem to start working and played with her crayons during directions. She talked to her neighbour during work time. Mrs. Jenkins corrected Susan a little, but mostly watched and let it go as just an odd day for Susan.

At lunch, Mrs. Jenkins had her first break, fifteen minutes to eat quietly. She took her first bite when someone stood at the corner of her desk. It was Susan.

“Mrs. Jenkins, could you help me? I don’t know how to do our work from this morning and I don’t want to take it home.”

“If you had paid attention, it wouldn’t be a problem.” That is what Mrs. Jenkins thought as she laid down her sandwich. Instead, she looked in Susan’s eyes and said, “Yes. Let’s see what we can do.”

32932339950_7d0969d68b_qWhen she finished, her break was gone. But, Susan was set.

This is love, God’s way. It is about what is best for someone else. It is about giving yourself, a sacrifice of some sort. It is about the thousands of moments and times teachers show God’s love by remembering His greatest gift to us and how much we don’t deserve it. And, then doing the same for a child.

Love, God’s way, is powerful. It breaks down barriers in lives and cultures and countries. Nothing can stop it as it seeps into hearts that are hungry for someone to care unconditionally, with nothing expected in return. It is radical in a world based on transaction. It is free. But, it requires sacrifice.

The life you give away is yours. While you may not physically die, your gift of your life for the sake of children demonstrates love, God’s way.

Whether rich or poor,36502702275_3c3194c158_m Christian or not, everyone craves this love. “Good” kids need to know that this love can’t be earned; it is not bought with good behaviour. Messy kids need to know someone is on their side, even though that love is expressed through caring discipline. God’s love differentiates according to need and changes lives.

As one of TeachBeyond’s core values, “love for others” brings purpose and power to what we do. It guides our words and choices both in the classroom and outside of it. It aligns our daily work with God, minute-by-minute, for any situation or place. Love is our method and our message. It is the goal of our instruction.[1] John tells us that it is how people know we are Jesus’ followers.[2]

This agapao type of love is not soft and sweet, although it can be. This love is not the world’s “love” that thinks first of hugs or chocolate or sex. God’s love is the sort that often acts in spite of the other person, not because of him or her. When God loved the world enough to give His only Son, it was not because He liked our sinful, messy, and rebellious world. This love takes strength and courage. It is not for the timid.[3]
Love, God’s way, has much more to do with choice and action than feeling, although often the feeling follows. This love shows itself in hugs and encouragement as well as discipline and demands. It acts in a way that is best for the other. It is hard work and empties us of self.

Last week, I sat with a team of TeachBeyond teachers in a sensitive country as they discussed Transformational Education. They are immersed in a world that strips away the easy answers. Each one of these experienced teachers talked about love as central to their job in the classroom.

And, they also understood that the only way to love like this is to first be loved by God and transformed by Him, to let the Holy Spirt make them different and empower them.

The beginning of love for others is to know and feel that you are loved. To meet God often enough to begin to understand the incomprehensible and overwhelming love He has for each of us. “We love, because He first loved us.”[4]

As Paul reminds us in Ephesians, may each of us “know the love of Christ which surpasses knowledge, that you may be filled up to all the fullness of God” and that we may see Him “do far more abundantly beyond all the we ask or think, according to the power that works within us.”[5] God makes loving others possible.

This is good news indeed. And students like Susan are counting on it.

Joe N., Th.M.
Elementary School Principal
Asia

[1] 1 Timothy 1:5

[2] John 13:35

[3] 2 Timothy 1:7

[4] 1 John 4:19

[5] Ephesians 3:19-20

 

Photo CreditsTeacher & StudentsGlobal Partnership for Education – GPE Flickr via Compfight cc Veddah girl. Allesandro Pucci. via Wikimedia CommonsccArt ProjectAll32932339950_7d0969d68b_q4Ed Flickr via Compfight cc

Joe has served in Christian school leadership in three schools  over a span of 32 years, spending 14 of those as a headmaster and the rest as a principal. Additionally, Joe has been a speaker, writer, and consultant for Christian schools. He is now serving with TeachBeyond as an elementary principal in Asia.