My Favorite Teacher
My favorite teacher is my history teacher,
and he is by far the best teacher that I have ever had. He has the
ability to make a subject that many students find incredibly boring come
to life through his enthusiasm and passion for history, and his love of
being a teacher. Going to his lessons is something we look forward to,
not dread, like we do with most other lessons.
It’s ever so funny to watch him get excited about something, which happens in every lesson. It’s easy to know that he’s getting excited because he begins bouncing up and down slightly in a way that no other sixty-something year old would ever managed without looking completely ridiculous. He has this dark (with more and more grey streaks these days), springy hair that lines the edge of his growing bald patch, and the hair bounces up and down with him like thousands of tiny little springs. Then, he takes on his whole new persona, often going into role and becoming the character or figure he is talking about, doing the voices, the actions, and parading up and down the room gesticulating wildly, but all the while there’s a gentle ‘bounce, bounce, bounce’, as though the springs are not just on his head but on the soles of his shoes too.
A teacher that doesn’t take himself too seriously always will be a big hit with teenagers, although he’s not afraid to impose his authority if he has to. I’ve only ever heard him properly shout once (although thankfully it wasn’t it me), but it isn’t an experience that I would like to repeat. When he lost it, the room suddenly became more silent than I’d ever known it to be before. We all sat slightly paralyzed, not even anting to breathe too loudly, because hearing such a jovial and jolly little man lose his temper was a huge shock. It certainly had the right kind of impact though, because he’s never needed to shout since.
It’s ever so funny to watch him get excited about something, which happens in every lesson. It’s easy to know that he’s getting excited because he begins bouncing up and down slightly in a way that no other sixty-something year old would ever managed without looking completely ridiculous. He has this dark (with more and more grey streaks these days), springy hair that lines the edge of his growing bald patch, and the hair bounces up and down with him like thousands of tiny little springs. Then, he takes on his whole new persona, often going into role and becoming the character or figure he is talking about, doing the voices, the actions, and parading up and down the room gesticulating wildly, but all the while there’s a gentle ‘bounce, bounce, bounce’, as though the springs are not just on his head but on the soles of his shoes too.
A teacher that doesn’t take himself too seriously always will be a big hit with teenagers, although he’s not afraid to impose his authority if he has to. I’ve only ever heard him properly shout once (although thankfully it wasn’t it me), but it isn’t an experience that I would like to repeat. When he lost it, the room suddenly became more silent than I’d ever known it to be before. We all sat slightly paralyzed, not even anting to breathe too loudly, because hearing such a jovial and jolly little man lose his temper was a huge shock. It certainly had the right kind of impact though, because he’s never needed to shout since.
It is actually this teacher that I have to thank for my love of
history. In his lessons, history does not mean copying out of textbooks
and writing pages and pages of notes. History is alive; history is
something tangible, that you can see, hear and feel, and we can live it
through dressing up and acting out scenes or taking trips to important
places of historical interest. And although he’s getting on in years and
may not be teaching for much longer, he will have an important place in history for many of his students, because there
has never been a teacher able to bring a subject to life in quite the
same way he does.
MY FAVOURITE TEACHER
In my school there are many teachers.
Each one teaches us different subjects. Although all of them are fairly
good, there is one teacher whom I love and admire the most. Her name is
Ms. Lily. She is the most pleasing personality that I have ever come
across. She is an ideal teacher. She has all those qualities which a
good teacher is expected to have.
Ms. Lily is a science teacher. She loves
the subject that she teaches and has an in-depth knowledge of it too.
She teaches science almost as though it were a hobby class. She does not
adopt the old methods of teaching. In fact we even forget at times that
she is teaching us from our text books.
Science comes alive in Ms. Lily's class.
When she teaches, no one talks about anything but the topic that she
discusses. She has the ability to draw out attention to the subject and
also to sustain it. She conducts various experiments in the class and
demonstrates them thus making it much easier for us to understand what
she teaches. She does not merely read from the book but gives us a
concrete picture of everything, so that we see them before us.
Although her subject is science, Ms.
Lily has a good knowledge of other subjects also. She is well versed
with all the current affairs of the world and she often links what we
are studying to something that may have been taught somewhere else in
the world. She encourages us to ask questions so that we may be able to
understand the subject well. She never loses patience with those
students who take long to grasp the subject.
Ms. Lily gives personal attention to all
the students. If, by chance, any student tries to play the fool in her
class, she is firm and does not allow that to happen. She is a great
combination of kindness and strictness. She encourages the students to
ask each other and her anything with regard to the subject so that a
healthy discussion generates new ideas and increases our curiosity about
the subject.
She is very popular, but she is not
conceited. She is courteous to her colleagues and the principal of the
school. I have never seen her frown or lose her temper. She remains calm
even when there is a crisis of any kind. She makes me love going to
school. I always look forward to my science period.
She is an ideal teacher and provides the students with a good role model. I love her the most and hope to be like her one day.