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Posts tagged ‘teacher’

Although I am not a person who would ever choose to go back, even if I had the choice, I am grateful for the people who have helped to shape my life and who have taught me, in classes and by their lives, to be a good person.

Even though I don’t want to go back to my childhood, I love to remember. Memories warm my heart. Last week, I began writing this blog. I don’t know why I had Melba R. on my mind, but I did. She was the first teacher I remember who taught me without me knowing that I was being taught. She also influenced my own teaching style as I have taught various classes within my church and when I have been a substitute teacher.

I received a phone call this week from my parents telling me that Greg, Melba’s husband (of probably close to 70 years, I don’t really know) had passed away. I don’t know many details, but I have the email address of their son and I will contact him. An older son is married to my cousin, so we, as I have found so often in life, have many connections to the people who most influence us and change our lives.

Melba R. was my church teacher when I was 14 and 15 years old. Each week, she taught us a well prepared lesson. I looked forward to attending her classes. Even when I was sick, I hated that I had to miss her class. She was very wise. She always brought a picture of a rose for us to color. (It was the symbol of our age group.) I didn’t realize until years later that I learned more from her because she kept my hands busy while she shared her inspirational message. When learning styles became popular, I enjoyed studying how we learn; now I can watch someone or talk to a person for just a few minutes and am able to discern his or her learning style. When she taught us, she just knew it. She didn’t have to study learning styles. She understood what learning styles were, and her goal was to help each young woman in her class to know she was loved and that she could make good decisions that would give her happiness in her life.

She took us to her house and helped us perfect our cooking skills. I remember looking through a stack of music–she allowed me to do that–because I love music. I now have a stack of favorite music of my family sitting by my piano. I loved being with her because I felt the love she had for me. Even now, as I think of her, I have a warm feeling of being loved that fills my heart. My only regret is that I didn’t tell her what an impact she had on my life.

I am a kinesthetic learner. I learn best by doing. And in a traditional classroom situation, I learn best by taking notes or drawing or doing something with my hands. Long before we discovered learning styles, I was captivated and learning lessons I would need in my life because I was coloring a picture every week.

I miss her and think of her often when I am preparing a handout or activity for a class I will teach. I think of her husband playing the organ beautifully. He always wore soft-soled shoes to play.

January is thank you month. To whom will you say “thank you” for influencing your life for good? Thank you, Melba R., for teaching me about love.

I have known Vera since her High School years in South Carolina.   We are delighted to have her to do our guest blog today.  As a mother and a teacher in the State of Texas, she shares her example of empowering herself to live her dreams.

What a game BYU played last Saturday . . . object lesson for my young sons included the words “patience”, “planning”, and “pride”. At this time in my life, I am most grateful to have learned that patience is, indeed, a virtue.

Ask any BYU grad what “84″ means and if their blood does run blue, she will tell you that was the year BYU won the National Championship. But if you ask me what “84″ means . . . my answer is something very different. 1984 was the year I graduated from BYU with a double major . . . Journalism and Secondary Education . . . and it was also the year I got married. We moved back to my “home” in South Carolina and I began my adult life supporting my new husband in his pursuit of a Masters in International Business . . . I did not become a journalist, nor did I become a teacher. I began working where the best money could be found and put off starting a family. Three years later, after he acquired his Masters degree, I was a newly divorced, single mother with a precious baby girl. It was time to start MY life over again.

It has been many years since BYU won the National Championship . . . it has been many years since I gave up my dream of being a teacher. I spent the better part of the past 20 years being a mother. My children are my Masters degree in LIFE. I am so very proud of them. When my youngest son began kindergarten 4 years ago, I decided to get paid for my volunteeing at his school and become a sub. I had a blast . . . I subbed at all the local schools in any subject, at any grade level, and found that I was still a teacher at heart.

With patience and planning, I’m getting back to where I started in “84″. On October 31, 2009, I “sat” for my teacher certification exams for the state of Texas. I felt like I was in high school again. I had crammed. I had prayed. I had said, “I’ll just see what’s on the test” and take it again in February. Last Monday, the e-mail with my test scores popped up.

I am now certified as a CLASSROOM TEACHER in the state of Texas — crazy to feel like I just graduated from college again. Crazy to feel the thrill of a BYU victory that was both amazing and inspiring. Crazy to see “84″ and know that patience, planning, and pride give power to the weary and strength to the brave. My blood does, indeed, run blue . . . but doesn’t everyone’s?

Vera Meadows McKee
Friendswood, Texas