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What makes a good teacher great? | Azul Terronez | TEDxSantoDomingo

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    I'm obsessed with the question:
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    "What makes a good teacher great?"
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    I've collected 26,000 responses
    to this question,
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    in eight different schools,
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    from the poorest schools in Los Angeles,
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    to suburban schools in Texas,
    to elite private schools abroad.
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    And after 24 years of teaching students,
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    I'm still perplexed by this question.
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    Today, I'm going to teach you
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    the lessons I learned
    from those thousands of students,
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    and learn what I found out from them
    if we just listen to students.
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    The thing about it is
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    that during my time
    of asking kids this question,
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    I realized that we don't ask this question
    for a particular reason:
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    schools are afraid.
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    Based on fear, they don't really
    want to know what kids think.
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    Partially because they don't think
    kids will take it serious.
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    I'm going to share with you
    one of the most profound quotes,
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    answers to this question
    that I've ever received.
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    [A great teacher eats apples]
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    (Laughter)
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    Now, I know what you're thinking.
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    Doesn't this prove my point?
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    "Great teachers eat apples."
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    When I first saw this,
    I dismissed it as silliness,
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    but it appeared again and again.
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    So I thought,
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    "There's got to be something to this,
    but what are they trying to tell me?"
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    So one day, I decided
    I would start eating apples.
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    I ate them in the morning, at lunch,
    during class, in the hall.
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    Kids began to give me apples.
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    The'd see me eating them
    and say, "You're eating an apple!"
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    "I know!"
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    They would smile, and I would smile back.
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    It wasn't until I understood
    that kids wanted to see me
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    as somebody who is willing
    to receive a gift from them,
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    that the apple was a symbol
    for our relationship.
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    There was goodness in that, and trust.
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    But for a long time, I wasn't listening
    and I hadn't understood this.
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    [A great teacher is chill]
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    They have their own language.
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    When they say, "A great teacher is chill,"
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    what they really mean is:
    "Don't take it too serious.
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    Be calm in all situations.
    Don't get overwhelmed."
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    (Laughter)
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    They have a way of speaking to us
    about what they really want to tell us,
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    but we have to listen.
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    Right?
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    I'm the father of two grown kids.
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    They're out of school now and in college.
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    But when they were at home
    and they were teenagers,
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    I had to learn a whole new language.
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    When they would come home
    from school, I might ask them:
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    "How was your day?"
    and they would say, "Fine,"
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    which usually meant:
    "It was not bad. It was pretty good.
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    Nothing happened eventful.
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    I probably learned something.
    Maybe I didn't."
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    But if they came home
    and said, "Fine," what they meant was:
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    "It wasn't really great, but don't ask me,
    because you wouldn't understand anyways."
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    If I asked them how their day was
    and they said "OK,"
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    what they were trying to tell me was:
    "It wasn't good at at all,
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    and you should probably
    ask me more questions,
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    but don't expect me to answer."
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    (Laughter)
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    Kids have their own language;
    they have their own way of thinking.
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    They want us to think like them
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    and understand
    what's inside of their head.
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    They have so many ways
    of thinking that things are great.
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    They want us to see
    their world inside of them.
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    But they don't want us to act like them;
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    they want us to be calm
    and protect them and keep them safe.
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    Kids have a way of communicating,
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    and adults just haven't spent
    the time listening.
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    But what if we did?
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    What if we really listen
    deeply to students?
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    One of the things I noticed
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    after all the years
    of collecting these responses
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    is that there is patterns that emerge.
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    When I asked the question
    of what makes a good teacher great,
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    oftentimes I heard,
    "A great teacher loves to teach."
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    70 percent of the time, the quote
    or the answer that followed was:
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    "A great teacher loves to learn."
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    The reason this is significant
    is they don't see this happening.
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    They don't see teachers
    learning in front of them.
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    They see them teaching,
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    but they wish they would learn
    along with them.
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    Think about it.
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    Principals hire teachers
    to be content experts,
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    to have all of the knowledge,
    not to be learners.
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    But what if they did?
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    What if you showed up in the classroom,
    and the teacher had something prepared,
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    said, "I don't know exactly
    what we're going to do today,
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    but I can't wait to learn with you."
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    Or that they saw their teacher struggle
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    through something
    they didn't actually know
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    and then eventually discover the answer.
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    Kids want to be inspired by this idea
    that learning is important.
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    But they don't see it in schools.
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    [A great teacher isn't a teacher]
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    When I saw this quote:
    "A great teacher isn't a teacher,"
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    I actually was a little bit offended.
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    "What do you mean?! I'm a teacher!"
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    They're like, "We know."
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    What they were trying to tell me is:
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    a great teacher isn't in the classroom.
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    Think about it.
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    Think about a time that you have
    some enduring understanding,
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    a time when you learned something
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    that you still remember
    and you use to this day,
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    like throwing a baseball or riding a bike.
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    I remember learning
    to ride a bike from my mom
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    when I was five years old.
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    She took off the training
    wheels of my bike,
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    she got behind me, and began to push.
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    And we ran, and we ran,
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    until she finally let go,
    and I began to ride a bike.
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    That's what I did;
    that's how I learned to ride a bike.
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    I can still ride a bike to this day
    from that moment.
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    But can you imagine if I tried to learn
    to bike from my mom in a classroom,
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    what it would look like?
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    [Copy this
    Bike riding 101]
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    (Laughter)
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    "Son, first, you need to learn
    all the parts of a bike.
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    There's the pedals and the crank,
    and there's a chain that turns the wheel.
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    You have to have a significant force;
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    once the force has enough momentum,
    you can keep your balance.
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    That's how a bike works.
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    I want you to learn all the parts,
    be able to label them and draw them.
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    Then you're going to learn
    and write a research paper
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    about the history of bike riding.
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    (Laughter)
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    All the important elements,
    the adventure, the development of bikes.
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    And at the end of that,
    you're going to take a final examination.
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    If you pass and get an A,
    you can ride a bike.
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    (laughter)
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    At five years old,
    I think I would've said,
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    "Never mind, I'll just walk."
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    (Laughter)
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    This is exactly what we do to children.
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    We put them in a classroom and tell them,
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    "This is what I want you to learn.
    It's important. Do it."
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    And kids know that it's not true,
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    that we don't really value
    learning this way.
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    So no wonder they're disruptive,
    or bored, or disengaged.
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    Kids want us to be teachers
    that aren't teachers.
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    I want to tell you a story about Yvette.
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    "A great teacher understands
    that they have a life outside of school."
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    They really do.
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    They want us to know
    that their life in school
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    is way more different
    than the life outside of school.
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    I just thought, "Well,
    how hard is your life?
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    Your job is to do school;
    my job is to teach."
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    Yvette was a tough student,
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    She was feisty, and she had
    an infamous reputation.
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    She walked around
    with a jacket to prove it.
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    Whenever she walked around,
    the kids would follow.
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    She would come in and sit
    in the front row and lean
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    just so that she can have
    eye contact to intimidate me.
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    She would call me "mister"
    and not even use my full name.
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    When she'd get up to go to the bathroom,
    all the girls would follow.
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    Eventually, I learnt from Yvette
    what she needed to learn.
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    And I thought I became
    pretty good at what I was doing.
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    I noticed one day, she stopped
    turning in her homework.
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    She had become a great leader
    in the classroom:
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    she turned in her homework,
    she participated in class;
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    she actually was quite good.
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    So when this happened,
    I was surprised.
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    So I went up to her and said,
    "Yvette, I'm very disappointed in you."
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    She said, "I know mister; I'm sorry."
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    "I expect it turned in tomorrow."
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    Tomorrow came, and just a few sheets
    of unfinished work were turned in.
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    I also went up to her and said,
    "Yvette, this is disappointing."
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    She said, "I normally do
    my homework in the bathroom
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    because it's the quietest
    place in my house,
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    but this week the electricity
    was turned off, and it's dark in there.
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    I had a candle, but it burned out.
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    And I'm sorry."
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    She gazed down, not her prideful self.
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    I had missed the point.
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    I had not listened when she said,
    "I'm trying, mister."
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    I heard the words, but I didn't listen.
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    Great teachers notice
    when there's a struggle.
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    They don't make assumptions
    about what kids can and cannot do.
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    They wait and watch,
    and they rescue them when they're stuck.
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    Good teachers hear them,
    but they don't listen.
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    I'll never forget Yvette,
    and I'm grateful
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    because whenever I see
    an answer of a student like that,
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    I remember her, and I listen.
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    [A great teacher sings]
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    This was the most perplexing answer
    I think I ever received.
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    It happened every year for ten years;
    at least one student would put this.
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    "A great teacher sings."
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    What are they talking about?
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    I can't sing.
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    So I started thinking,
    "Wait a second. What do they mean?"
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    It wasn't until Danny turned it in
    as one of his responses.
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    He was the class clown.
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    You know he was the one
    that when we took the class picture,
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    he put ear fingers behind your head.
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    He would make faces
    at me during lectures
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    so I would laugh.
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    Everything was a joke to Danny.
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    So, when he turned in his responses,
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    and they were all serious
    and actually really good,
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    I was surprised when this
    showed up in the middle.
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    But I knew there was something to it;
    I just didn't know what.
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    So the next day,
    I put the agenda on the board,
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    listing all the activities of the day,
    the expectations, and the homework.
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    And instead of actually reading them,
    very seriously, I sang,
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    (Laughter)
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    in an operatic style, big as I could.
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    The eyes of the students were wide,
    their mouths dropped.
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    (Laughter)
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    But you know what happened
    at the end of that?
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    I expected pointing and laughing.
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    But the classroom erupted
    in cheers and applause.
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    There was a standing ovation.
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    I could not believe it.
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    At the end of class, they walked out,
    gave me high fives and handshakes,
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    and here came Danny.
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    He walked in, and he leaned in,
    and patted me on the shoulder, and said,
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    "I told you a great teacher sings."
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    Great teachers make themselves
    humble before their students.
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    They take risks.
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    They put aside their fear to try.
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    They trust that they are going
    to be supported if they fail.
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    But they don't see this;
    they see experts, remember?
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    Content experts.
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    What if we hire teachers
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    not to be deep understanders
    of content, knowledge keepers,
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    but deep understanders of students?
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    How our schools
    would change and transform?
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    But it's no wonder students don't care
    or that teachers don't really listen.
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    Because they have never been taught.
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    But what if we did listen?
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    You see, we spend three years
    of a student's life,
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    teaching students to read.
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    About 12 years of those students' lives,
    teaching them to write.
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    Maybe if they're lucky,
    they get a semester or half a year
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    learning to public speak.
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    But they get virtual zero years
    of formal listening instruction.
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    Zero.
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    Think about it.
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    When was the last time
    you were at a dinner party,
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    and someone asked a question:
    "So what do you do for a living?"
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    and the response was,
    "Oh, I'm a listening teacher.
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    I teach advanced listening
    at the high school events,
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    listening communications,
    or beginning listener for elementary?"
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    We don't hear this.
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    Because we just don't believe
    that in schools it's important,
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    though in the world,
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    listening is one of the number one skills
    essential for business and life.
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    And we just don't teach it.
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    We need to listen to our students.
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    In our classrooms are the future.
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    The Maya Angelous, the Mother Theresas,
    the Elon Musks of the world.
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    And can you imagine
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    if we took the time to ask those students,
    "What would make a good teacher great?"
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    and then we actually listened,
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    we could transform schools and education.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
What makes a good teacher great? | Azul Terronez | TEDxSantoDomingo
Description:

"What makes a good teacher great?" For the last 24 years, Azul Terronez has repeatedly asked students the same question. In this inspiring talk, Azul shares some of the simple but profound answers drawn from more than 26,000 responses he has collected, emphasizing the importance of listening.

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
15:07

English subtitles

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