Wake up
everybody no more sleepin in bed
No more backward thinkin time for thinkin ahead
The world has changed so very much
From what it used to be so
there is so much hatred war an' poverty
Wake up all the teachers time to teach a new way
Maybe then they'll listen to whatcha have to say
Cause they're the ones who's coming up and the world is in their hands
when you teach the children teach em the very best you can[i].
No more backward thinkin time for thinkin ahead
The world has changed so very much
From what it used to be so
there is so much hatred war an' poverty
Wake up all the teachers time to teach a new way
Maybe then they'll listen to whatcha have to say
Cause they're the ones who's coming up and the world is in their hands
when you teach the children teach em the very best you can[i].
As I was driving
to work this morning, thinking about what the topic of this week’s blog would
be, this song was playing on my radio.
Most of the time I will sing along in my best impression of Teddy
Pendergrass, however today, the lyrics resonated with the problems plaguing
education.
I find it very
interesting the first topic the song addressed was education. Of all the topics that could have been
addressed; politics, employment, etc, education, specifically teachers was the
first topic to “wake up.”
I also find it
very interesting that teachers were singled out. Why didn’t the song single out principals,
superintendents, legislators or parents? Why teachers? Is it possible teachers were singled out
because teachers are one of the most influential adults in the life of school
age youth?
From Kindergarten
through twelfth grade, the constant adult in a child’s life other than their
parents is a teacher. In an average
school year, a teacher will spend 1,274 hours (182 days x7hrs) with a
student. When we consider the hours over
twelve (12) years the number of hours is 15,288 (182 days x 7hrs x 12 yrs), that
is a lot of time school age youth spend with teachers. This brings me to the next part of the verse,
the reason behind the call for teachers to “teach a new way.”
By asking
teachers to “teach a new way,” the song speaks to the problem that teaching has
become a stagnant entity which has compromised a student’s ability to become an
active participant in the educational process.
Evidence of this appears in the next verse: “maybe then they’ll listen
to what you have to say.” This verse implies that the results of stagnant
teaching manifests themselves in students’ tuning certain teachers out or total
disengagement from the educational process.
The final two
verses remind us the influence teachers have on pathways to adulthood students’
may take. The verses imply that teachers
hold the key to the future success or failure of students’. Students engaged in school are more likely to
become successful adults. The opposite,
disengaged students are likely to struggle in their adulthood. This is the reason for the verse “teaching
them the very best you can.”
Teachers are the
adults who plant the seeds, cultivate and nourish our children’s educational
growth from kindergarten through twelfth grade.
However stagnant teaching will not produce the kind of adults we need to
keep our country strong.
It’s time
to wake up change the way we teach our children