Examiner column for September 16.
A new semester at George Mason University is full of hope.
Students may be turning over a new leaf or embarking on a new living
arrangement or a new major. Anything is possible.
As predictable as the sense of infinite possibilities, though, is the anxiety of returning students. Some have been away from school only a semester or two, but some return after a decade or two. Those mature students have never achieved their degrees for a range of reasons: they were in the military, raising families, or working long hours.
Returning students think of themselves as “old,” not
“returning,” but their experiences enrich every college setting. Not all
20-year-olds want to be in the classroom, but every single returning student
I’ve taught has been grateful for the opportunity to lose sleep reading and
writing for my class.
They
are more relaxed in their interactions—invaluable when the class is a writing
workshop. In peer review groups, returning students know how to give constructive
criticism because they’ve done that with co-workers and family members. Unlike
many younger students--intimidated by having to give criticism--the older
students realize that “criticism” isn’t always negative, and is essential to
the revision process.
Imagine
what marriage or parenting would be like if we hesitated to congratulate family
members on their strengths, and failed to suggest ways to shore up weaknesses?
Those life lessons are what make older students the backbone of any writing
class. In many ways the most unhelpful comment is “everything’s fine.”
Additionally,
older students are not as afraid to raise their hands as younger students. I
plead guilty to not speaking out when I was in college. I always felt my
insights might be obvious, or—worse yet—stupid. I was secretly jealous of those
who never doubted their own opinions, and their right to express them. At some
point, my favorite English professor wrote on a paper, “You need to speak up
more in class. You have lots to say.” That was a turning point for me.
Experience
isn’t just salutary on the student side of the podium. In teaching, older is
often better. I heard from many students at Oakton High School that they
appreciated that I wasn’t “uptight. Young teachers are slaves to their class
rules!” they’d complain. I occasionally “bent” the rules with impunity because
my experience told me that no administrator would chastise me for a liberal
bathroom policy given the support of my students and parents.
Yet
I would never have had the opportunity to bend rules or teach Senior Seminar if
my Ph.D. in literature and experience teaching college part-time and full-time
had not led the state to waive requirements for education credits. “Alternative
certification” is as effective as traditional methods of certification,
according to a recent study by the National Center for Policy Analysis. Without
that waiver, I would not have spent 23 years teaching high school.
So
if family members want to return to college, or contemplate a career move to
teaching, encourage them to turn over a new leaf. Make their dreams part of a
movement to welcome age and life lessons into the classroom.
Hi Dr. Jacobs!
Just swung by the blog after a long hiatus; I'm back at Goucher for a final semester.
I'm glad to hear the Oxford trip went well-at least you didn't have to deal with 2:30 PM darkness or freak snowstorms. (I spent last fall in Norwich, at the University of East Anglia.)
Study abroad is required at Goucher, either for three weeks, a semester, or a year. besides UEA, I also spent three weeks in Vietnam. Both experiences were not only learning experiences, but growing experiences as well. I learned about my limits and abilities, and I believe even now, just a few short months after I have returned from being in Europe, I am better for having learned what I did abroad. Goucher's study abroad requirement may be unique, but it really does enrich a student's education to go abroad. While I was initially against this policy for financial reasons, I now find myself supporting it.
Hope you're doing well.
Take care,
Liz
Posted by: Liz | September 15, 2009 at 04:57 PM
Hi Liz--I'm so glad you are back at Goucher and that you benefited from your study abroad. Have a wonderful last semester!
Posted by: Dr. Jacobs | October 31, 2009 at 09:01 AM