the education cycle

​Our lives are constructed of our experience and our perception of those experiences. These are not mutually exclusive concepts; they build on and feed into each other. As adults, and thus educators, we play a role in how youth appreciate experience and how they learn to perceive those experiences, whether inside the classroom or not. If that responsibility sounds oppressive, consider this: the underbelly of responsibility is vulnerability.

​A few weeks ago I worked with my Manhattan Middle School students as they made their way through their first science test of the year. From Wednesday morning to late Thursday night of that week I was one of the scientists at the University of Colorado’s Mountain Research Station helping to educate 5th graders about the methods used in scientific research. Then, on Friday, I had the opportunity to talk one-on-one with the mathematical biologist Dr. Greg Dwyer. What each of these events has in common, other than me, was a cycle of learning and teaching, an ebb and flow between mentor and mentored. There was the openness of giving and receiving. Inherent in this ecosystem was the responsibility to facilitate wonder and enthusiasm while at the same time being vulnerable to not knowing and therefore opening the doors to our own learning.

​The use of the term ecosystem is not accidental. Regardless of scale, an ecosystem functions best when processes flow unencumbered. Understanding what processes contribute, how they interact, and what might disrupt them is the focus of my research. Delineating the components of an ecosystem can be a frustratingly slow undertaking. There are the inglorious hours behind a microscope, the wading through scientific articles in search of a single piece of insight, and the looming uncertainty that in the end your statistics will prove your theory misaimed enough so as to add another year onto your education.

​And then there are those periods of time when inspiration and insight come in abundance and from unexpected players. More often than not these nuggets of academic sustenance are a matter of how we view our place in the process. How comfortable we feel within our niche and how we feel that niche is contributing to the ecosystem. There is in academia, a hierarchy. Professor, graduate student, undergraduate. So too in secondary and elementary education; teacher, student. Yet while tenure may confer respect, it does not mean the flow of information is in a single direction, just as the processes in a natural ecosystem do not flow in one direction.

​The point of all this is that we each have the chance and ability to contribute to someone’s education. And that includes our own. When you discover something share it. When you don’t know something admit it. Let those around you teach. And when you seek to teach do so with compassion.

1 thought on “the education cycle

  1. Oh how I wish you were my son’s biology teacher right now. The class is killing us! Miss you Jeffie!

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