Posted in General

Changemakers, Assemble!

The story so far: The world was coming to an end or so it seemed.

A mist was settling uncomfortably and uncontrollably like someone’s grandmama being swallowed into the recesses of her own upholstered settee as she perches herself with a hot cuppa. Meanwhile, Newsreaders declared war on sanity; Oracles were pronouncing doomsday; Doctors and healthcare workers metamorphosed into the heroes we needed, not the ones we deserved, and politicians were doing what politicians do – exist! 

And then, of course, there were teachers. Those unblemished souls, the practitioners of propriety, the avengers of imbecility, the protectors of the holy grail of wisdom. Teachers, who, armed with a Spartan-like resolve prepared for the inevitable – Change!

And much do we love change. Change, the comb that life offers when a man is bald. Change, like doing the foxtrot on one foot. And so it was with teachers; dragged into nightmares down data street, seemingly forced into a straitjacket while being asked to thrive in territories unknown. Territories that were euphemistically, ironically and quite like the wolf in sheep’s clothing titled ‘TEAMS’! 

Forgive me, for I walk around in hot porridge. For teachers are not my protagonists. Teachers of English are! It is here that I must interject with a dose of desperate metafiction. I promise, henceforth, to offer you dumplings instead of flowers and strip the rest of this story of the excesses of a teacher of English who has hitherto been deprived of an audience.

Where were we? Yes, teachers of English. Those misunderstood guardians of grammar who were thrust into a world unknown; where students were mere initials trapped in a grey cell. Students, who could now, at the prompt of a solitary key, mute the very digital existence of the teacher quite like flies to wanton boys. 

The world was coming to an end. Our world was coming to an end. 

Learners lured by the trappings of social media, pay-per view movie sites, Netflix and online games were now finally moving on from a relationship that had long begun to sink into irrelevancy.

We had to reinvent ourselves. And fast. We were on the clock. We had to make English cool again!

So we did what we have always done when faced with insuperable odds: pedaled in yogurt for a while as we suffered from paralysis by analysis, deigned to discuss data (what sorcery is that?), and drank coffee – heavenly manna and our fountain of youth, nay, sanity. But just as the sun shone, without any alternative, the next day and the next, so did we, teachers of English decide that this could not possibly go on.

The last dregs of our bitterness coincided with the lockdown now in its full might. And then without warning, almost audaciously, the entire posse of teachers managed to deconstruct data. That was the first step. The second was to coerce every single learner to pass through the gates of Lexile tests. More data.

The third was to experiment with this new landscape – Microsoft Teams. And suddenly, before the sun rose and sank 7 times, our protagonists managed to navigate through every nook and corner that Teams had to offer – from One Note to Differentiation through the creation of multiple channels, assignments, Whiteboards and of course, background filters. We even learnt how to position our cameras strategically thereby hiding the bowl of nachos that graced our tables during collaborative meetings.

Once these basics were traversed, teachers started to push the frontier. Events were planned. Guests were invited and students were mobilized like never before. Mr. Frank Dullaghan indulged in a tête-à-tête on poetry, Academicians from far and wide engaged in intellectual discourse on the relevance of Shakespeare in a post-Covid world, interviews were conducted with multiple personalities. Podcasts, Vodcasts and an explosion of publications followed. Impressed? We were just warming up. 

We orchestrated online elocutions and plays. We managed to conduct the biggest Global Debate competition in the history of our school; conducted and participated in Webinars and still found the time to engage in professional development activities. 

We dabbled in the serious arts as well. New Reading Policies were conceptualized, old Academic Honesty policies were revisited and updated. Learners were prepared for International Benchmark tests and proved to be a real ASSET to the department wall of achievements. 

Once again, we had crossed the salt desert of uncertainty. Once again, we rose above mediocrity. Once again, we did not settle. Every single teacher, guardians of grammar, practitioners of propriety, with a Spartan-like resolve, endured this onslaught of change and rose from the ashes as change-makers. We were teachers no more. We are learners and proud! 

Fast forward one year. 

The story now: The world is still reeling. Only this time we are prepared. 

By Sheldon John Dias

Posted in General

Our Purpose

My conversations these days are interspersed by the words “…..life will never be the same again.” What I do know is that my life as a teacher will definitely not be the same again.  I keep hearing the term ‘the new normal’ and can’t help but wonder, when has life ever been normal for us, teachers?

As I sit to pen down a few thoughts about why we the teachers of English of GEMS Modern Academy, Dubai, felt the need to start this blog, I find myself going back a couple of years in time. It was the year 2014 when I had started a new phase in my career as a teacher. I had joined the school that I am currently teaching in and I had no clue what I was in for!!

As a teacher, my foray into technology, for the purpose of teaching, was limited to typing out question papers and when I was in the mood to be fancy, maybe a couple of worksheets. And here I was, where I was expected to carry a laptop into my classroom and actually use it while teaching. Needless to say, it was not a tool….. it was an aberration for me. I often asked myself in those days, why do I need technology to tell my students what I could and will anyway? How could a PowerPoint presentation be more effective in filling up my students’ minds with all the wonderful things that I wanted to tell them?

To cut a long story short, I hated technology. In many of my angry rants I would blurt out saying, “How can technology replace a teacher?” Till one fine day, a much younger colleague, in his ubiquitous calm manner said that technology can never replace a teacher. However, a teacher who uses technology might be able to replace a teacher who does not. His words made me stop in my tracks and as much as I would hate to admit, they weighed heavily on me. I began to ponder and introspect.

The more I thought about it, the less I liked myself. I realized that I had quintessentially become that very teacher that I myself detested in my student days. The words of George Bernard Shaw, “Those who can’t do, teach” began to mock me. Was I not that very same person who very proudly had said that I am privileged to be in one of the most powerful professions in the world? I am in the business of moulding minds for a better future. Moulding…. I reminded myself….. not filling up empty vessels with my knowledge, my experiences, my ideas and beliefs. I asked myself if I was really allowing my students to have their own  journey or was I merely handing them mine? I did not like the answers, and as much as I detest change, I knew it was time to address the elephant in the room. And thus started my tryst with technology. 

That was the beginning of my new normal. During the various professional development courses based on technology, I now began to listen with the intention to try it out. I did allow myself to fail but I did not allow myself to stop trying. After all these years I still fail ……miserably at times! I still do not allow myself to stop trying.

I can say now with complete conviction that the life of a teacher is in perpetual beta. In our line of work, we are constantly shaping and reshaping knowledge as it were. In this ever-shifting and ever-evolving world of education, a flexible and open-minded attitude and the willingness to learn is what defines us. The most dangerous people are the ones who think they know it all and who stop learning. Perpetual beta leads to perpetual innovation which leads to Kaizen – continuous improvement. 

And that brings me to the purpose behind this blog by the Department of English. Our objective is threefold: 

  • to help us reflect as a team on pedagogy and best practices 
  • to share our joys, trials and tribulations, mistakes and success
  • to build a network of like-minded teachers 

As an educator, I don’t think I am any less than a pioneer. We are constantly breaking the glass ceiling and exploring beyond the boundaries.

So dear pioneers, let us not be in competition with technology but let us partner with technology to evolve and empower not only ourselves but also those young minds that are entrusted to our care.  

In conclusion, I have to say that George Bernard Shaw must not have had teachers like us. If he did, he would have said, “Those who can do, do. Those who can do more….Teach!”

By Bipasha De

Head – Department of English