Once there was a man named Nathan. He wanted
very much to be a teacher. So he went to seek the advice of
the wisest, most highly respected counselor in the land.
"Wise counselor," Nathan began, "it has always
been my dream to be a teacher. I want to stimulate the minds
of the young people of our land. I want to lead them down
the road of knowledge. Please tell me the secret of becoming
a teacher."
"Your goal is a commendable one, Nathan. However,
it is also a very difficult one to achieve. First you must
overcome three major obstacles."
"I am ready to meet the challenge," answered
Nathan bravely.
"First you must swim the Sea of Children," directed
the knowing counselor.
Nathan started off to swim the Sea of Children.
First he had to learn their 38 names. He had to send the line
cutters to the end of the line. He made the paper throwers
stay after school to clean the room.
He commanded the name callers, pushers, and
punchers to apologize to their victims. He gave M&M's to those
who finished assignments and stars to those who were sitting
in their seats quietly. Nathan checked passes to see how many
children were in the bathroom. And he tracked down students
who were gone longer than was necessary. He arranged the desks
in alphabetical order, then boy-girl, boy-girl, and finally
into small groups of four. He lined his children up for physical
education and music and library and lunch. Then he stifled
a cry when the secretary came into the room with number 39.
Tired and shaken but still undefeated, Nathan returned to
the counselor for his second task.
"You are a very determined lad," said the advisor.
"However, now you must climb the Mountain of Paperwork."
Nathan set out at once. He wrote objectives
and drew up lesson plans.
He made out report cards and graded papers.
He filled out accident reports, attendance reports and withdrawal
reports. He completed inventories, evaluations, surveys, and
request forms. Finally, he made dittos and more dittos. He
ran them off until he was purple in the face. But the courageous
boy's resolve never dwindled. He went to the wise counselor
for his third task.
"You are indeed very strong, Nathan. But this
third task will take all the courage you can muster. You must
now cross the country of Duties and Committees."
At first Nathan was hesitant. But his convictions
remained steadfast. He began his long journey across the country
of Duties and Committees.
Nathan took lunch duty, bus duty, and recess
duty. He was on the social committee, patrol committee, and
the faculty advisory committee. He was the adult supervisor
of the student government and ran the United Fund and Easter
Seal drives. He went to PTA meetings, NRA meetings, SST meetings,
School Site meetings, and in-service workshops. He organized
bicentennial programs, talent shows, and book drives. Finally,
he was elected the building representative of the union. At
last Nathan reached the outskirts of Duties and Committees.
Exhausted but happy, he returned to the knowledgeable
counselor.
"I swam the Sea of Children. I climbed the Mountain
of Paperwork. I crossed the country of Duties and Committees,"
Nathan proclaimed. "Am I not worthy of the title of Teacher?"
"Why, Nathan," began the counselor, "you have
been a teacher all along."
Nathan protested, "But I have not stimulated
any minds. I have not guided anyone down the road to knowledge,
I have not had any time to teach"
"Oh, you say you want to TEACH! I thought you
said you wanted to be a teacher. That is a completely different
story!!
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