Day Forty Four.
“Sy, may I turn this in on Saturday again this week? I am swamped with other work.”
My response: “Abosfreakinlutely.”
She didn’t have to ask. She knows my policy. So–really–she didn’t need to ask. But she did. Matter of manners? Concern of conscience? Reach at responsibility? Yes. No. Maybe. All or none of the above, she asked.
Kids know my policies. Kids know I am flexible, and while some of the adults look in and see flexible as easy, I am sorry they misinterpret my practice, for if they were to look in a little more closely, I believe they would see something else at play.
I am not giving them an easy out. I am asking them to make decisions about their own journeys. I am asking them to weigh their own choices and consequences, their own causes and effects. But I don’t see it as my “teaching responsibility.” I don’t think that’s my job. I don’t think that’s our job. I think the only true teacher of responsibility is life. And as our lives come into contact with the kids we serve, we simply give them experiences. And from those experiences may come opportunities for them to regard responsibility from their own choices.
So, then, does that mean that the teacher who presents penalties for late work is providing an important experience in responsibility? Seems many believe this, but I do not believe that this–compliance–creates true responsibility. I think it creates deficit avoidance (often through inauthentic acts like “copying” work), and though we often sell this as “responsibility,” I don’t buy it. I think, commitment, not compliance, a better sell for reaching responsibility. So, maybe that’s it, then. Maybe my responsibility is to encourage kids to reach for responsibility. Either way–and in earnest–I don’t believe I am responsible for responsibility.
Happy Thursday, all. Stay safe.
Do. Reflect. Do Better.