Open Mind, Open Heart By Dunja Popovic
Student-Teacher Relationships
In a recent opinion piece entitled 鈥淪tudents Learn From People They Love," New York Times columnist discusses the crucial role the quality of student-teacher relationships plays in learning.Citing research听that shows the importance of relationships for learning outcomes, he bemoans the lack of emphasis on emotional connection between students and teachers in most mainstream classrooms. Show me the school, he says, where a teacher鈥檚 performance is evaluated in part on the basis of his or her ability to form relationships with students.As I read this article, I found myself thinking, 鈥淲ell,听actually,听Mr. Brooks,听that would be a Waldorf school!鈥澨As a Waldorf high school teacher, I was fascinated听to . I听realize how much of what he presents as cutting-edge scientific research is something Waldorf teachers have always known: students engage most deeply in learning when they are in a classroom with an adult who in is, in Brooks鈥 words, 鈥渙ffering active care for the [student as a] whole person.鈥This is something every Waldorf teacher trainee is told from day one:听听
- you need to care about who your students are, what they have been through, and what they are struggling with;
- you need to see听and value听them as human beings in a way that transcends their performance on any particular assignment or in any particular class;听听
- you need to honor your students鈥 gifts, even if those gifts have nothing to do with the subject you teach;听听
- you need听to revere the听potential听of each student听for self-fulfillment as a unique human individual.听
This is where we come from as Waldorf teachers, no matter what subject we teach.In addition to telling me what I already knew, though, Brooks鈥 article led to further reflections on an aspect of the student-teacher relationship that is less explicitly addressed in . This is the part about the teacher letting students see who he or she really is as a person.David Brooks sums up this dimension of the student-teacher relationship with the pithy observation that 鈥渨hat teachers really teach is themselves.鈥 He clarifies what he means by adding that teachers teach 鈥渢heir own contagious听passion for their subjects and students.鈥澨This is certainly true, but I would add that teachers 鈥 especially in the upper grades听when students are becoming young adults 鈥 also model their own ways of dealing with adversity, of working through moral dilemmas, of weighing the pros and cons of an issue, even of confronting existential issues听or听emotional pain.
Teaching at Sacramento Waldorf High School
As a teacher of the humanities in the SWS High School, I have noticed that this aspect of my relationship with students becomes especially important in听11th and听12th听grades. At this point, students no longer need me to be the invulnerable adult or the (supposedly) all-knowing teacher in order to feel safe in the classroom.Instead, they need me to show them how I work through doubt听or how I deal when I鈥檓 facing a challenging task.Thus,听for example, I will share with听11th听grade听students how difficult it is for me to teach World War II as a topic because of the trauma my parents and grandparents had in connection with it. But I will also emphasize that I continue to teach the class in which World War II is covered because it鈥檚 important for me to share the experiences of people who lived through the war, even though this pushes me to my limit.When I ask myself why I reveal my own struggles in this way, I would say it鈥檚 because it shows the students how a particular adult works through something that is difficult.听听In addition, I would say that I consciously choose to make myself vulnerable when interacting with older students. In opting for vulnerability, I want to encourage them to let themselves be vulnerable, too, and their hearts be open as they mature and begin to have a sense of who they are.Because this is really what Brooks鈥 article听boils听down to: if your heart is open, your mind will be open, too 鈥撎齛nd only an open mind can听continue to grow.听听Dunja听Popovic is a high school humanities teacher.