Monday evening I had the double-whammy-pleasure of being reminded that sometimes I do make a difference in my students' lives.
First, here's S. Mara Faulkner, one of my own former instructors who shaped my future and still means the world to me.
Mara Faulkner, OSB, instructor, mentor, friend |
When I got home from the launch party, I found another such moment waiting for me in my inbox. Below is the text of the email (with permission from the writer, of course). For clarity's sake Governor's School is a summer program for rising high school seniors. Students live in dorms at a local college and experience college-level classes while meeting new peers from all over the state.
Hello Sandy,
My name is John Andrews and in 2005 you taught my creative writing workshop at Arkansas Governor's School (I was the guy that journal-ed all the time). Since then I've graduated from UCA (BA in Writing - Spring 10) and am now working on my MFA in Poetry at Texas State (just started this Fall) and cannot thank you enough for putting the MFA seed in my head!
The serendipity of today was that a friend suggested I read your book, they said "you know, you kind of write in the same style of this poet.... I think you'd like her." Kind of blew my mind. So I found your blog and thought to touch base with you and thank you for inspiring me in 2005, and now!
Thank you, more then you know,
John
It may seem like I'm calling attention to myself by posting about these two experiences, but that is not my intention. Both events just made me so darned happy that I feel like I must share the joy. And for all of those fellow teachers / instructors out there...we really can make an impact on our students' lives. Every once in a while we get the gift of knowing that for sure.
Thanks to all of my students past and present for making my life the fuller for knowing you all.
10 comments:
Hey, Sandy, it's Al Maginnes. Great blog entry. Sometimes things like this happen to me as well, and they are sometimes what keep me going when, like now, the papers are stacked to the ceiling (I have to tell my night class tonight that I do not have the papers they gave me last week)and it seems like there might never be time to write a poem ever again. Thanks for this. It was right on time during a difficult morning.
Ah, Al, glad it helped out this morning. The stack-o-papers threatens to tip in my office as well. We can only do what we can do, but it is good to know that sometimes it helps.
Hey, Sandy.
Your post made me all weepy and sappy. You and I were so fortunate that Mara influenced both of us so profoundly, and now we can only hope that we have some sort of positive effect on our students' lives. I, too, have a mountain of papers to grade, but your post puts me in the right frame of mind. Thank you.
Yes, Michelle, we were lucky! Thanks for the note, and I'm glad the post helped.
i think we teacher need to hear, from time to time, that we do have an impact on our students. so much of teaching and learning is intangible, elusive; a concrete reminder that it's worthwhile is needed every so often.
Nancy, thanks for stopping by. Glad the post resonated with you. It is a gift to hear from students, and I hope all the great teachers out there get a gift like my Monday gifts very soon.
Because we're on a weird quarter system, we have graduation tonight. Lots of folks complain bitterly about our graduation attendance requirements, but I love graduation. I love to be reminded that students go on to succeed! Your post reminded me of that graduation night feeling.
Happy graduation night! It is fun to know we were part of the success.
What a touching note from your former student...
Thanks, Shin Yu. It made my week!
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