Musings on my progress as a teacher of Language Arts Literacy, Music, Drama, and Film after a 20-year career in Entertainment Law.
I think we can all hope for Keating-like moments in our teaching: ones we can capture and frame in our minds. A lot of us who admire Keating fail to see that he is an emotional expression of what teaching can be. The film doesn't show what a teacher should be all the time (no one teaches that Carpe Diem lesson 7 periods a day, 5 days a week), it shows Keating's memorable glimmers. Of course we can't all take symbolic action all day long, but we can take effort to do so when possible. That's what I take from his role. Great post, thanks!
© 2008-2010 Samuel Kerr Lockhart. Published under Creative Commons License Attribution Non-Commercial
I think we can all hope for Keating-like moments in our teaching: ones we can capture and frame in our minds. A lot of us who admire Keating fail to see that he is an emotional expression of what teaching can be. The film doesn't show what a teacher should be all the time (no one teaches that Carpe Diem lesson 7 periods a day, 5 days a week), it shows Keating's memorable glimmers. Of course we can't all take symbolic action all day long, but we can take effort to do so when possible. That's what I take from his role. Great post, thanks!
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