“What is the difference between a teacher and an educator?”
-Nell Bielecki, MS Science Teacher, Michigan
Hmmm. Great question, Nell, about what–at times–might be a tricky, sticky topic.
On the surface, it’s simple. A teacher is in the classroom. An educator is in the profession (or anywhere not in the classroom).
But in my experience with this distinction, there is often more at play than what’s on the surface. There is a “versus,” a need to make a distinction of what is a teacher and why that matters.
Teachers matter. Much suggests they matter most–both empirically and anecdotally. Teachers matter. But they don’t matter alone. Enter the educator, the supporting cast without whom teachers could not fully function. From administrators to counselors to paras to subs (to the list goes on), they all serve and support kids. Kids: our common ground. Each makes an impact. Each matters. So, why, then, the distinction? Aren’t we all teachers? No, we’re not. We’re all educators. But we are not all teachers. There is a distinction.
Proximity. Teachers are those closest to kids. We have an opportunity unlike any. Connection. That’s the distinction that matters. Teachers are connected to kids.
~sy