Good Grief
March 10, 2009Change is tough. It is so exhausting to be a person who fosters change. I live and breathe the challenge on a daily basis as do so many of the readers of this blog.
Some of the things I've heard in the last two weeks:
"Why should kids work with someone else in the world? Isn't Camilla good enough for them?"
"All we had was a school desk, books, a pencil, and the teacher's paddle, and that worked for us."
"Why should we accommodate kids with LD, not everyone can succeed in this world!"
"Just be a teacher and don't share with everyone else what you do here -- what do you want to help them? Just teach, that is enough for the rest of us."
There is no doubt that we are moving towards a higher acceptance rate of technology as an essential part of schools, however, with this higher adoption are more questions and push back than ever.
Is it even worth it?
As I sit back and ponder this, I remember that there are times in my life when the grief was worth it! I have three beautiful children and one miscarriage. The miscarraige was agonizing grief and come to think of it, there was also a lot of grief in bringing the three beautiful children I have. (especially my 10 lb 3 oz baby girl! Whew!)
One time, the miscarriage, I was sick for three months, and then, horrible, heartbreaking disappointment. Was the grief worth it at the time? NO! I felt like I had nothing to show for it! It was horrible!
But, looking back, I wouldn't even have my wonderful first born if I had had the baby I miscarried - and what would I do without my first born son? Was the grief worth it -- in retrospect, yes. Every single sickness and illness and pain I endured was worth it to get my beautiful three kids into this world.
It was GOOD GRIEF!
Sometimes our efforts are thrown into something and it completely fails! We think it is worthless and that it was all for nothing. We want to quit.
However, I think of pioneers. Those who sweated and struggled out west here in the US. It was truly difficult. Many fell by the wayside and yet they opened up the settlement of the west. Every society has a story of their pioneers. Their revolutionaries. The lonely, struggling, persecuted, fighting few who brought about truly positive change. Those whose grief finally and ultimately brought about the good of their society. Good grief.
That is you and I. Those who are driven out of love and hope that we are reaching this generation with some new tools. Those of us who know there is no "magic pill" or "super website" that will fix all of our ills, but that teachers with heart, hard work, and knowledge of technology tools AND the tools of the past that still work can produce positive results. People willing to take the challenge of building bridges that the societies of tomorrow will walk across.
These are tough days and yet... somehow... I look at it and think that in ten years, we'll look back at the "good old days" when we were in the infancy of truly great, positive change and be thankful that we endured this grief.
Somehow, holding onto this and also seeing my own children improve their grades as I use technology to help them study, lets me see the good in the grief.
So, when you have your headache or heartache over things related to technology today, wipe your forehead and smile -- say "Good Grief" as the special sign to yourself and others "in the know" that you are celebrating your part in this evolution of education and are willing to endure the heartache because you see a better day tomorrow for students and education as a whole.
And though people of today will not thank you, you will put your name, in its own way, along with the names of other pioneers in history.
Keep the faith. Remember that teaching (next to parenting) is the most noble calling on earth.
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Vicki Davis is a teacher and the IT director at Westwood Schools in Camilla, Georgia. Vicki co-created three award winning international wiki-centric projects, the Flat Classroom project, the Horizon project, and Digiteen with teacher Julie Lindsay, currently at Qatar Academy. These projects have linked more than 500 students from both public and private schools in such countries as Austria, Australia, Bangladesh, China, Japan, Spain, Qatar and the US. These collaborative projects harnessing the most powerful Web 2.0 tools available including wikis, blogs, digital storytelling, podcasts, social bookmarking, and more. Vicki is a cofounder of the Women of Web 2 and has been featured in various media including Thomas Friedman's book, The World is Flat, the Wall Street Journal, and the Boston Globe.
Vicki blogs at the Cool Cat Teacher blog, which has been an edublog award finalist for Best Teacher blog for the last two years and is currently ranked the top teacher blog in the world according to Technorati. Vicki is a Google Certified Teacher and Discovery S.T.A.R. Educator. She lives in Camilla, Georgia with her three children and husband, Kip.
Vicki published her first book in Fall of 2008 entitled ClickSmart about the holistic method of teaching software that she uses in her classroom. This method enables her to teach a wide variety of software programs and build technical fluency and digital savvy that continues to distinguish her students in their global projects. Vicki is also a freelance writer and conference presenter.