"Where are the heroes of today?" a radio talk show host thundered. He blames society's shortcomings on education. Too many people are looking for heroes in all the wrong places. Movie stars and rock musicians, athletes, and models aren't heroes; they're celebrities. Heroes abound in public schools, a fact that doesn't make the news.
There is no precedent for the level of violence, drugs, broken homes, child abuse, and crime in today's America. Education didn't create these problems but deals with them every day.
You want heroes?
Consider Dave Sanders, the school teacher shot to death while trying to shield his students from two youths on a shooting rampage at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado. Sanders gave his life, along with 12 students, and other less heralded heroes survived the Colorado blood bath.
You want heroes?
Jane Smith, a Fayetteville, NC teacher, was moved by the plight of one of her students, a boy dying for want of a kidney transplant. So this woman told the family of a 14 year old boy that she would give him one of her kidneys. And she did. When they subsequently appeared together hugging on the Today Show, even Katie Couric was near tears.
You want heroes?
Doris Dillon dreamed all her life of being a teacher. She not only made it, she was one of those wondrous teachers could wring the best out of every single child. One of her fellow teachers in San Jose, Calif. said, "She could teach a rock to read." Suddenly she was stricken with Lou Gehrig's Disease, which is always fatal, usually within five years. She asked to stay on job--and did. When her voice was affected she communicated by computer. Did she go home? Absolutely not! She is running two elementary school libraries! When the disease was diagnosed, she wrote the staff and all the families that she had one last lesson to teach--that dying is part of living. Her colleagues named her Teacher of the Year.
You want heroes?
Bob House, a teacher in Gay,Georgia, tried out for Who Wants to be a Millionaire. After he won the million dollars, a network film crew wanted to follow up to see how it had impacted his life. New cars? Big new house? Instead, they found both Bob House and his wife still teaching. They explained that it was what they had always wanted to do with their lives and that would not change. The community was both stunned and gratified.
You want heroes?
Last year the average school teacher spent $468 of their own money for student necessities--workbooks, pencils--supplies kids had to have but could not afford. That's a lot of money from the pockets of the most poorly paid teachers in the industrial world. Schools don't teach values? The critics are dead wrong. Public education provides more Sunday School teachers than any other profession. The average teacher works more hours in nine months than the average 40-hour employee does in a year.
You want heroes?
For millions of kids, the hug they get from a teacher is the only hug they will get that day because the nation is living through the worst parenting in history. An Argyle, Texas kindergarten teacher hugs her little 5 and 6 year-olds so much that both the boys and the girls run up and hug her when they see her in the hall, at the football games, or in the malls years later. A Michigan principal moved me to tears with the story of her attempt to rescue a badly abused little boy who doted on a stuffed animal on her desk--one that said "I love you!" He said he'd never been told that at home. This is a constant in today's society--two million unwanted, unloved, abused children in the public schools,the only institution that takes them all in.
You want heroes?
Visit any special education class and watch the miracle of personal interaction, a job so difficult that fellow teachers are awed by the dedication they witness. There is a sentence from an unnamed source which says, "We have been so anxious to give our children what we didn't have that we have neglected to give them what we did."
What is it that our kids really need? What do they really want? Math, science, history and social studies are important, but children need love, confidence, encouragement, someone to talk to, someone to listen, standards to live by. Teachers provide upright examples, the faith and assurance of responsible people.
You want heroes?
Then go down to your local school and see our real live heroes--the ones changing lives for the better each and every day!
(THANKS TO LIZ FOR THIS ENTRY)
i think that this clamor for heroes speaks of how people, generally speaking, have lost faith in the leaders we look up to - particularly in government.
ReplyDeletethen again, all we have to do is look around us and discover that to every average person is a heroic heart. hope exists. and the possibilities are endless.
Right. The definition of "hero" tends to get romanticized too much when in fact heroes are ordinary people doing extraordinary things.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this Sol... :)
ReplyDeleteI call those teachers...UNSUNG HEROES...they remain unrecognized, unrewarded,un-named, ignored, forgotten, faded...that's why no song or praise or thanks are given to them. Poor souls. But rich in spirit.
ReplyDeletemarisol,
ReplyDeleteteachers like yourself are the unsung heroes in our society --- atheletes, actors, etc.. would tell you themselves, they are not role models or heroes -- they would tell you, that teachers are the ones that are the TRUE heroes and role models in our society.. and without people like yourself, our younger generation would be lost. just like nurses, teachers may not make the money that other jobs offer, but the importance of what you guys do is immesurable. everone knows that teachers are undepaid which is a travesty !!
MARISOL, EVEN THOUGH I'VE ONLY KNOWN YOU FOR A SHORT TIME, I AM VERY PROUD TO HAVE YOU AS A FRIEND !
agree man ako sa indo na unsung heroes man talaga ang mga titsers.
ReplyDeletebut generally speaking there are many unsung heroes in our midst.
a woman who got pregnant and abandoned by her bf and yet still proceeded to bear the child to fruition is unsung heroine.
single parents who deny themselves many amenities in life just to ensure na provided and mga anak nila and working towards their better future are unsung heroes.
a boy born of poverty and peddle in the streets so he may help his parents and his siblings for the food of the day is unsung hero.
an expatriate like us who once in a while are generous to send money to our friends and relatives are unsung heroes.
perhaps there are degree of differences why each of us in our small ways are unsung heroes, but we are because everytime we choose personal sacrifices than personal indulgence, we are unsung heroes nevertheless.
let us rejoice in our inner selves because of all of us has the capacity to be unsung heroes.
Thanks teacher sol...teachers are the real heroes.
ReplyDeleteI really believe that the teaching profession is the noblest profession...
YEs you're right! THEY ARE THE GREATEST HEROES for me....It is easy to help somebody when you're able...but if youre not...it's hard...., but that counts a lot here..
ReplyDeleteAng masakit niyan is how our society looks at it. yun talagang nagtiis, naghirap o nagbuwis ng buhay eh hindi talaga nabibigyan ng due recognition - at yung mga walang kwentang bagay eh yun ang nabibigyan ng edia attention - bakit nga ba ganoon ang society natin no??? pero para sa akin ang GREATEST HEROES ko eh ang aking mga magulang - dahil kung hindi sa kanila eh wala ka ngayon....sometimes yung andyan lang sa tabi natin nakakalimutan natin.....
ReplyDeleteEVERYONE,
ReplyDeleteFor the kind words about teachers as unsung heroes, thank you so much. I agree that there are many people who are unsung heroes (not just teachers and nurses) but many more, they are the people who persevere to work hard and in the process touch other people's lives. But they have to be recognized, though they don't ask for that. They have to be recognized to inspire other people. And I believe that they are appreciated in some ways like letting people know about the heroic things that they do. The people that you mentioned, Antonio, though whose names are not known, I salute all of them!
I know a lot of people... my mentors, all my teachers from LCCD to College to MA, who inspired me and touched me deeply. Do they ask for recognition? NO. So this article about WHERE ARE THE HEROES OF TODAY are about them. I want them to know that all the good deeds and the values and inspiration that they imparted to me will be passed on
...PAY THE GRACE FORWARD...
When you do something uncalled for that denies self-centeredness, you are a hero in your own way.
ReplyDeleteHi Teacher Sol,
ReplyDeleteI like to say that all those who have forsaken other more lucrative businesses or careers to teach and be able to touch future lives are heroes ... teachers, in other words, but that's like lifting one's chair ... however, totoo naman.
Nonetheless, I consider teaching a privilege. It's not really that it is a chance to be a hero but it is an opportunity to "touch the future" long after we're gone.
My heartache is when people say "teacher ka LANG"... that is like a stab right through my heart. Sadly, there are a lot of people who think this way. When a young teacher-friend opted to resign (because of "oppressive administrative tactics") and she applied for a job in Manila (she's a CPA-MBA), she met a lot of interviewers who frowned when they knew she was once a teacher- basically, they said teaching doesn't count when you want to join the business world. That makes me very, very sad.
i rememebr one teacher of mine telling me that her best reward ever received for being a teacher, is when one of her former students came to her and say thank you very much for teaching them.
ReplyDeleteAnd i couldn't agree more...
I had once a student in our province whom i remember to be very bright and she was sooooo vocal in complaining to me why im teaching them very difficult lessons/topics/subjects and im slave driving them, etc...
I dont know what happened next because their class was the last class i handled, and i left for another assignment. I never had the chance to update myself with what happened to them.
I didnt know that, that complaining student transferred to a very high-standard state university. Then one time, we met, and she immediately called my attention, and we exchanged hi's and hello's. I asked here about whats keeping her busy, etc. Then she suddendly told me...Sir, Thank you very much for the lessons you gave me, i learned and was able to use them in my classes. Sorry if i made it difficult for you when i was in your class. really, thank you very much..."
Really! the joy i felt at that time was sooo...i dont know how to describe...it was like i was on top of the world.
I know, teachers here understand what im saying...
Though now i stopped teaching because of other work, but the sacrifices and hardwork that the teachers endure, i will always understand because once was there too...
hence, i always have high regards to teachers, no matter how the society look down on them...
if only they knew...
TO the teachers out there...
Thank you very much and honors be with you!
5:49 AM
EVI, very well said, I agree with you. We have to be constantly on the lookout for these unselfish people in our own life we can call our heroes; people that we can admire and emulate. Let's adopt their styles. Like them, let's lead by examples.
ReplyDeleteBUGSYBEE, "teacher LANG" daw sya? I would say with strong conviction, "TEACHER AKO!". The reflection of people toward the work they do is a reflection of their own worth. I am appalled that teachers view themselves (or is it the society itself) as a group of people who are poor and forlorn. Members of every profession display their diplomas, licenses and certificates ---every profession but teaching. The tragedy is that teachers are inthe diploma business. Why are teachers reluctant to hang up a diploma that says to the world "Look at me, I am an educated person". Why? Because teacher culture has taught teachers to practice learned helplessness, planned pitifulness.
Let us remember the fine nuances and the distinguishing essence of that proud word "teacher". Let us be reminded of the tools we have at our command, because of our talents, our traits, and our training, and because we chose to become a teacher.
Teacher Bugsy, as teachers, let us present ourselves to the world as a person worthy of the noble title...TEACHER.
DOPS, eeep! nagulat ako sa pagsulpot ng comment mo...hehehe. Ah, naging teacher ka rin pala. Yes, being a teacher is a very rewarding career. The returns are intangible but great! Nasa harap ko ngayon ang favorite poem ko, given by my co-teacher: "A hundred years from now, it wouldn't matter what house you live in or what car you drive but that you made a difference in a life of a child". You just shared your own story that proved the truth of this poem. Thanks DOPS!
ReplyDeleteERUANNIE, "have lost faith in the leaders we look up to - particularly in government" This really bothered me, I feel the same way.Leaders begin with respect for their own worth. Society needs models of leadership.It's too bad that the people who really know how to run the country are busy teaching in their classrooms.
Teacher Sol, I hope I didn't give you the wrong idea. That young CPA-MBA is VERY PROUD that she was once a teacher; it's the people she meets in the business world who look down on her qualifications because she is "just a teacher."
ReplyDeleteI didn't study to be a teacher; I was trained for a different profession but, as I always told my students, I'm proudest when I tell people that "I am a teacher" and even when I'm already retired, I still say "I am a teacher" (present tense) because I will always be a teacher.
BUGSYBEE, that's the disadvantage of skimming when reading, I missed you point. But I am glad to know that there are a lot of teachers who stand up proud of their profession despite knowing that the society they live in look down on them. I am with you, Teacher Bugsy. Proud to be a Pinay Teacher!
ReplyDeleteHi again - I answered you in my blog too, right after your comment.
ReplyDeleteIt's okay Teacher Sol. I understand how this has affected you. I also get very upset and emotional when it gets to this "teacher lang" issue. Para bang gustong gusto ko sabihin - bakit, kayo ba, kung walang mga teachers, will you be CPAs, engineers, doctors, lawyers or whatever it is that you have finished? That's why I always made it a point to stress to the young teachers in my area to remember (and be careful with) the power that they wield - they have the power to make CPAs, lawyers, etc.
Teacher Sol, why don't we get together in cyberspace and start a "PROUD TO BE A FILIPINO TEACHER" group? Just a suggestion.
BUGSYBEE, Sabi nyo "Teacher Sol, why don't we get together in cyberspace and start a "PROUD TO BE A FILIPINO TEACHER" group? Just a suggestion." Good suggestion po yan!
ReplyDeleteInvite natin iba pang mga co-teachers natin sa cyberspace: Eruannie, Tito Rolly, Teacher Luchie (Singapore), ikaw, ako, si Liz (ifi-feature ko sa blog ko next week), sino pa ba?
Maraming issues sa pagiging Pinoy Teacher. Recently lang, ang daming nag-interview sakin sa pagiging Pinay Teacher ko sa Amerika. Would you believe pati French newspaper na Le Monde tumawag sakin at over the phone interview ako. While it's good that some teachers are helping the country's economy, bothered pa rin ako sa brain drain. Please read my "Dear Teacher Sol" entry, isang blogger ang nagtanong kung bakit nandito ako. May dahilan kung bakit nandyan kayo nina Tito Rolly and Eruannie, di ba po? May dahilan din kung bakit nasa ibang bansa kami nina Teacher Luchie at Liz. Maganda sana kung maayos nating maa-address ang mga ganitong issues.
My blog is proactive, it aims to inspire and give hope to the Pinoys, especially the teachers. Maliit na kontribusyon ko na yan.
Sige, let's invite them. Pinoy Teachers, UNITE!
Teacher Sol, let's work on this through the email first so we can make arrangements. I will be checking your blog frequently for developments.
ReplyDeleteBUGSYBEE, right! Let's email each other. Nakalagay po ba sa profile sa blog nyo ang email addy nyo?
ReplyDeleteMy heroes are my parents, i would not be here today, living a nice comfortable life without their continous advice and encouragement to finish school and their examples on how to live life in general. also teachers, nxt to parents, teachers are the most influential people in our lives. also the military,police, etc that risk their lives to protect our freedom and enable us to live our lives wthout fear.
ReplyDeletehello! eto na naman ako...hehehe...
ReplyDeleteyaman din lamang na napapag-usapan natin ang pagiging teacher...pwede bang magsampa ng kaso..este ng reklamo dito...what i mean is mag post, hehehe...
I am proud to be teacher and i will never lose that pride...as bugsybee said, she will always be a teacher...so do i...
kaya lang...eto...
mahirap kase sa atin sa pinas, eh...alam mo yun, i know a lot of people who are very deserving to be teachers because they have the perseverance, ideals, intellect, etc...but they dont have the license (kase di sila nagtake ng education or education units to take the exam...)
ngayon naman...while teaching in the public schools, i met a lot of incompetent teachers...and mind you...sila pa yung terror! imagine my horror when i learned about that...but what can i say...they were there already...longer than me...
can i change the system? no...then what can you suggest?
another thing...
i have lots of friends also that were capable of being good teachers but they were not given the opportunity to prove their worth...reason? no vacancy...
heres the catch...and they have to renew their license evey 3 years! so that they would remain eligible teachers if ever they be accepted! iamagine...di pa nga sila nakapagtrabaho, pinagrenew na..otherwise di na sila matatanggap...ano ba anmang klaseng pamamalakad yan...
ok..those are just few of my sentiments regarding the teacher-issues in our country, well just the negative side, but i guess those issues must be addressed before it get worse...
hanggang dito na lng muna, i feel like im monopolising this blog, hehehe...
it is nice to participate in this cyber class...i just happen to be be reading the other blog by sassylawyer...and whoooaaaa! sobrang debate dun...sumakit ulo ko...buti napadako ako dito at medyo nawala sakit ng loob ko. sobrang sakit sa ulo magisip about the politics in opur country...hehehe...
ok...dito na lng muna ako, as in..hehehe
hi teacher sol just want to comment on your last post (you want heroes). my mom is a teacher for almost 40 years now and she's still teaching.I'm very proud of her dedication to teach children.
ReplyDeleteDOPS, some of the issues you raised here are very very familiar to me:
ReplyDelete- while teaching in the public schools, i met a lot of incompetent teachers Pare, pagdating ko dito ganyan ang nadatnan ko. Kita mo naman, baguhan ako pero pinararangalan na ako. Dahil sa katamaran ng mga nadatnan kong karamihan ng co-teachers ko dito. Ganyan din ang sinabi ng mga ibang Pinoy teachers na kasamahan ko dito sa school district. Hindi lang sa Pilipinas problema yan.
- i have lots of friends also that were capable of being good teachers but they were not given the opportunity to prove their worth...reason? no vacancy Buti nga di pa sila nakakapagsimula na magturo eh. May mga teachers ako na kasamahan dito na sobrang galing magturo, pero tinanggal sa school district. Ang rason, cost cutting! Di lang sa Pilipinas nangyayari yan.
- and they have to renew their license evey 3 years! so that they would remain eligible teachers if ever they be accepted. Dumating ako dito, under probation ako. Pauuwiin ako sa after one year pag hindi ko naipasa ang dalawang State Board exams (dalawa yan ha, grabeng kaba at dasal ko!). Isa sa mga kasamahan ko ang pumalso, syempre fired by the school district. Umuwi ba? Hindi. TNT na ngayon sa New York, hehe. Ewan ko, kahit dito maraming nagrereklamo dyan sa licensure na yan. Di lang sa Pilipinas nangyayari yan.
- sobrang sakit sa ulo magisip about the politics in opur country Napansin ko nga na ang hirap maging optimistic dahil sa mga negativity na nakabalot sa ating bansa. Bacause of that, to be able to look at the brighter side of life is a gift; para bagang clairvoyancy, hehe. Pagdating ko dito, ang problemang pang pulitika dito ay halos pareho din pala sa Pilipinas, dagdagan pa ng issue on war. Hay! What's happening to the world. Di lang sa Pilipinas nangyayari yan.
- buti napadako ako dito at medyo nawala sakit ng loob ko...dito na lng muna ako, as in. You have the gift of being optimistic. I saw it in your blog entries. Hold on to it and never let it go. Remember to "surround yourself with a discourse of possibility rather than succumbing to images of defeat.(Mike Rose, Lives on the Boundary)
CHEERS!
ARVIN, the two most influential people in a child's life are the parents and the teachers. I believe may entry na ako tungkol dito. We cannot contest the fact that our parents are our personal heroes (well, for most of us), their love for us is unconditional.Hindi yata kaya ng teachers to surpass that love of a parent to his child. Never.
ReplyDeleteIVY, cheers to your mom! 40 years of service as an educator, and still counting, wow! She must have taught 2 generations of her students. She must've made a big difference in the lives of countless successful people, who were her former students. I salute her for her patience and hard work!
kudos to all good-hearted teachers! btw, my mom was a teacher too before she decided to just stay home & take care of us. up to now, her former students enthusiastically greet her everytime they see her.
ReplyDeletetuesdays with morrie by mitch albom is a great tribute to all these unsung heroes as tj called them.
hello, teacher sol,...i already anwered your comment in my blog, i will just post it here too...teka...ma-copy and paste nga...
ReplyDeleteayan, hehehe...
********
hi teacher sol! tyyyy! hehehe....
i did not expect you will react on my comment point by point! hahaha...but of course your arguments are all good...i could not even say them better, hehehe...
currently im trying to improve my blog, editing here and there, just to make it a bit sophisticated, hahaha...
im not good in computers and i just learn these things on my own, by simply trying to change this and that....and eventually, im able to modify the template according to my own taste, though up to now, i feel like im inside the woods, becuase of these greeny colors of my blog, hehehe...though i might say, it is quite refreshing...
hmmm...by the way, might as well put this as my entry in my blog rather than just as a comment, what do you say? hehehe...
ok, tyy....
i will be there in your site sooner or later, and i will be awaiting for new topics you will post...
Ja neeee!
**********
pahabol lang...
i forgot to tell that my mom is a teacher too and she will soon be retiring.
Opo, taga Bicol din ako, kaya lng dai me masyado tatao magtaram kan bicol...hehehe
diit lang...
hehe...
sya nga pla, miss ko na ginataang gabi...meron ba kau jan? pahinge...
I teach too, and I know that my work impacts the world for eternity. The things we teach are passed on to our student's children's children ad infinitum.
ReplyDeleteThe job is fulfilling I may even do this for the next ten years.
NIKKI, kudos to your mom! "her former students enthusiastically greet her everytime they see her." , the great rewards of being a teacher.
ReplyDeleteDOPS, Saludo ako sa mom mo, pwede pa rin syang magturo when she retires. naisip ba nya na mag-tutor ng mga bata? It could grow eventually to a tutorial center or a school. take it from me, based from experience *wink*
Like you, I am also a beginner. Your greeny-leafy blog template is the same blog template I had (this blog) two months ago, with the title "My Heart Whispers" (corny 'no?). I had to change evrything, layout, title, etc, when I decided to transform this blog to which is now the Teacher Sol blog, more interactive and fun than my anthology.
Try this: www.tag-board.com, fun yan at marami kang makikilalang blogger friends dyan *wink*, ingat sa spammers and spoofers.
Mayo ako igding ginataang gabi, igwa kaming natong, haha. Joke lang. Harayo samuya ang Filipino Stores, dai ngani ako makabakal ning Filipino foods. Miss ko na ang Bicol Express.
To Teacher Sol, I’m proud of you. I’ve spent one-third of my life teaching back home. I guess I’m already done with my patriotic obligations. I’m happy to see some of my former students here in America. They’re here because of the profession which I’m very much part of.
ReplyDeleteLifted from Lumpiang Hubad
JIM, I am greatly honored by your visit. You are one of my role models because you're making a great impact to our country with your songs (Handog ng Pilipino Sa Mundo is now in my heart after that dream) and your being a teacher is truly inspiring. I read from your blog (entry on TEACHING, MUSIC, MEDIA, ETC..) how you love teaching. Just as Heraclitus says about one never crossing the same river twice, I haven’t taught the same subject in quite the same way all these years. I think I pretty much learn something new each time and so pass on new insights or connect new dots everyday. And that is exciting. Every time a class ends, I almost cannot wait to have the next session. That is very true to me too. By the way, can I sit in your class?
ReplyDeleteJOHN CLARK, as teachers, we are in the helping and caring profession, a service profession to help people enhance the quality of their lives. You have done that. Congratulations!
game ako sa suggetsion ni bugsy! actually, that's what i've been thinking over the weekend.
ReplyDeletewhile i was in a cleaning frenzy, my mind was concocting ways to invite teachers, pinoys and pinays in particular, who have blogs to come together in cyberspace and build a web ring.
we can write about school stories, our experiences as teachers/educators, defining moments in the life of an educator, etc. maganda sana kung exclusive sa mga Filipino. it's not that i'm bias to other race or culture, but with the way things are going in Phil. government, i think it's but proper to have "our" own voice in cyberspace. and perhaps, we can make a difference.
what other requirements? here are my suggestions -
1. the pinoy-pinay educator must have a blog or website (siempre naman)
2. retired and currently teaching and / or those in the field of education
3. posts should be about teaching, school, education, and the like.
4. format and genre of posts may vary - essay, poetry, short story, photo essay, multimedia
5. posts should be scheduled, e'g. every saturday / sunday
so far, ito pa lang ang naiisip ko. what else pa kaya?
hmmm...sana may logi din tayo...:-)
Last June 26, 2005 may natagpuang patay na batang babae malapit lang sa amin. Her 8 yrs. old sister manage to escape the rapist by playing dead. Kinabukasan nahuli yung 2 rapist, yung isa nagpakamatay yung isa nakakulong na ngayon, then kahapon nabalitaan ko na namatay na rin pala yung 8 yrs. old na batang nakaligtas, hinampas pala sya ng kahoy sa ulo at yun ang ikinamatay nya... pero bago sya namatay nasabi nya pa sa mga magulang nya kung sino ang mga salarin. para sa akin maituturing na bayani ang batang babae, bayani ng kapatid nyang walang awang ginahasa at pinatay ng kanilang tiyuhin.
ReplyDeleteERUANNIE, good take! Let's talk about this in private email.
ReplyDeleteDARKBLAK, bayani ang bata, at isa ding martir. Paano naaatim ng mga tao na biktimahin ang mga ganitong batang walang kalaban-laban? Kailangan ba namang igalang ng mga kabataan ang mga kamag-anak natin na may maitim na budhi? Maraming nangyayaring ganyan sa mundo, marami pa rin ang masasamang tao. Nakakalungkot ang kwento mo. Sana lang kahit na maraming masama sa mundo ay mangibabaw pa rin ang kabutihan laban sa kasamaan.
Yan ang bayani! Hindi katulad ng mga nagbabaya-bayanihan na taong inihambing pa ang sarili kay Ninoy Aquino, hmmmp!
ReplyDeleteKitang kita naman sarili lang ang iniisip...