A talented teacher changes trajectories, changes lives. Such teachers fill the minds of their students with curiosity and wonder, and allow young people to achieve something they never believed possible.
Most of us have had one of those, someone they can credit for the fortune — material or otherwise — they have today.
For High Court Judge Ian Callinan, it was James Blair, who taught him in his final year at a Brisbane public primary school.
“Mr Blair did not accept pre-ordination of futures,” he wrote in My Favourite Teacher, a 2011 book edited by Robert Macklin in which high-profile Australians shared recollections of the teachers who inspired them. “He raised children beyond their expectations.”
Callinan’s High Court colleague Michael Kirby struggled with maths. “I just didn’t get the hang of it,” he said. That was until a young teacher named Jim Coroneos turned up at Fort Street Boys’ High School in Sydney. “Suddenly the penny dropped. As if by magic, I began to understand algebra and even trigonometry.”
While MP Tanya Plibersek couldn’t pick a favourite individual teacher, she did praise a certain type of teacher: “The one whose enthusiasm was catching, who knew their stuff and loved their subject and passed onto me a lifelong interest in the material we studied together.” One of those was her art teacher, Diana Lewis.
I could go on. In my case it was a maths teacher who convinced me — and my parents too — that university, a long way from home, was a real option.
But we all have a story like that. And it comes down to impact: the power to change a future for the better. That’s the narrative that needs to be the focus of this rough-and-ready plan to revamp teacher training to deal with a nationwide shortage of educators, one that now sits at a crisis point.
It offers a wonderful opportunity for the Albanese government, but indicators of how it might do this should already be setting off alarm bells.
This crisis in numbers might be fixed by stuffing classrooms full of anybody who can work a whiteboard. But that’s the crisis in numbers — what about the crisis in teaching? Males have left the profession in droves, and our children are suffering as a result of it. Older, experienced teachers have been driven out by the technology that underpinned education through COVID lockdowns.
Some classrooms have made use of second-year university students, on a temporary basis, to plug shortfalls. Others have grown in size in the belief that some education is better than none at all.
In too many schools, children are being fed breakfast not available at home. In others, students don’t turn up and no one in authority asks why. The inequity that bubbled along before COVID now stands out as a marker for the cohorts that will lead the nation later.
This crisis in numbers needs to be explored through an analysis of why people like Diana Lewis, Jim Coroneos and James Blair might not be choosing teaching, and how we might fix that.
The mental health legacy left by COVID, now responsible for an upsurge in self-harm, eating disorders, anxiety and even school refusal, demands that too.
Increasing teachers’ pay packets to make them commensurate with the impact they have on lives is a start. So is disrupting how classes are taught to bring back wonder and curiosity and learning for information — not just for assessment.
Giving school principals a seat at the decision-making table is a prerequisite. When will any government start to value those with decades of information to offer?
Perhaps we need a system where the HECS debt of teachers is wiped. Perhaps we need to focus on those skills that travel beyond grammar and maths, to capture those who have that uncanny ability to rewrite someone’s future.
Four-day weeks? Public housing for those willing to teach in rural and remote areas? An annual bonus for people who can capture the imagination of those sitting in front of them?
Whatever the way ahead, Anthony Albanese is being offered a chance to change the delivery of education in Australia in a way his predecessors have failed. And a good start would be to listen to the experience of his colleague Tanya Plibersek and flip this narrative so we are filling our classrooms with a certain type of teacher: those whose expertise centres around inspiration as much as calculus.
What attributes does a great teacher need? And what do you recall about the teacher who inspired you? Let us know your thoughts by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name to be considered for publication. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity.
Madonna states the obvious truth about the teaching profession, but does not differentiate between the public and private systems, their resources and funding. The public system has been and continues to be denied the funding necessary to recruit and retain quality teachers in an environment conducive to successful outcomes.
This is testament to existing teachers who continue to work tirelessly against the odds.
Equality in education requires social and political will, this it seems Australians lack in abundance.
I became a teacher because of my history teacher. He inspired a whole generation of migrant women to further education. My university lecturers had not received the Memo. So many times they lamented that Gough’s free university resulted in “girls from the Western Suburbs”. I am retired now, doing some casual due to Covid, and still love the job. I retired as a Secondary Deputy Principal, a job that can make a huge difference. Thanks Freddy C., you were inspirational.
Someone is wearing rose tinted glasses. Give principals more power and create lots of little Hitlers; pecking orders from hell. Bureaucrats now rule, and teaching has become bureaucracy with teaching as a sideline. These days an ex-teacher has good employment prospects in a job they might actually enjoy for a change. Away from the rules, regs and screen time; away from petty, selfish and catty ‘superiors’; away from class wrecking kids and panic buttons. A teacher has a heavy load which has to be lightened quite a lot to be sustainable. If it wasn’t for the holidays there wouldn’t be any teachers. School is a weird construct at the best of times, quite unnatural.
I’ve heard Finland has a better school set-up entirely. There’s no reason Australia shouldn’t have the best systems in the world, other than our own inability to change ourselves until we do. But boy do we stuff things up! Not only can we not think outside the box, we’re in the box and don’t even know there is an outside. Teaching needs big injections of freedom and fun for a start. I’ve been in a straitjacket and it’s no fun at all. (Even for ten minutes.)
That’s me over there with the rose tinted glasses.
Yes,
No privatisation, fully public owned and operated. Universal in the true sense.
Finland – no NAPLAN and no BS administrative micro-management and no formal testing in the early years – just high-morale teachers helping kids learn – education, not bureaucratic box-ticking. And consistently the best educational outcomes in the Western world. (I’m not a teacher.)
‘No NAPLAN, no micro management or early years formal testing’ …….. and very few private schools.
Correct. I don’t know whether they’ve actually banned private schools, but they certainly don’t give them any public funding. And I think they’ve got strict zoning rules, so all the politicians and ruling class in general have to send their kids to the local public school – which means they make damn sure all the local public schools are of a consistently high standard.
This article came into my inbox this morning, indicating how a two-tiered education system is intended to serve a political objective in that wonderful land of opportunity across the Pacific: https://theintercept.com/2022/08/25/student-loans-debt-reagan/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=The%20Intercept%20Newsletter
Drandy,
I would simply say NO taxpayer funds for private schools. There is no educational benefit. See below.
We, the taxpayer, are subsidising all their contact networks or alumni as they like to call it. The effect of these networks is consistently illustrated in numerous Crikey articles. ie How the elite with their connections can get away with corruption amoungst their mates.
As an aside, this American spell check is ruining my spelling. Creating self doubt. Typical of the way the elitists manipulate. Should be banned in Australia.
https://theconversation.com/going-to-private-school-wont-make-a-difference-to-your-kids-academic-scores-175638
https://theconversation.com/australia-should-follow-chiles-lead-and-stop-funding-private-schools-33310
https://theconversation.com/canada-doesnt-fully-fund-its-private-primary-schools-and-australia-shouldnt-either-144281
https://theconversation.com/the-hidden-traffic-impacts-of-private-schooling-125229
https://theconversation.com/going-to-private-school-wont-make-a-difference-to-your-kids-academic-scores-175638
https://theconversation.com/yes-some-australian-private-schools-are-overfunded-heres-why-66212
https://theconversation.com/state-school-kids-do-better-at-uni-29155
Question – Is our education funding system designed to educate or create a ruling elite?
Thanks for the links. I think they provide a fairly clear answer to your question.
Watching the absolute obsession my little 3 year-old grand-daughter has with learning, it makes me cry thinking that for so many kids, the most effective thing our education system does is knock the joy of learning out of them.
I have known and worked with teachers with all those attributes. It is not the money that is the principal driver, but the reward of teaching young minds into challenging thinking and adults. The thing that the LNP fear the most is illustrated by their paranoia with curriculum. CODE FOR – WE DO NOT TRUST THE TEACHERS. Employees will always live up to your expectations.
As a young male teenager in the early sixties, it was Fred Exelby, of all the teachers it was the History Teacher that seduced me beyond the typical male subjects to an enlightened World of Asia as the future of Australia. Unfortunately many Australians have missed the bus and still mentally and culturally reside in Europe.
One is troubled as to how the LNP seem set on importing US antipathy and tactics towards teachers, education, wokeism, science, analysis etc. being used as a Trojan horse to discredit, denigrate and obstruct the development of empowered citizens.
My favourite teacher was in modern history – she taught at t regional public high school and in year 12 we learned
Women in History; Political History and Indigenous History. Mind opening stuff – changed my life!