Friday, August 28, 2009

Not so easy start

Ok. Here's my new life. I'm a graduate student – a PhD candidate – in mathematics education. I get the opportunity to teach at the college level while taking classes. In my opinion, it's the best of all possibilities. I get to be a student, which I love. And I get to return to teaching; although it is at the post secondary level, so my save the children desires aren't all being fulfilled.

My first night of my own classes and I'm feeling like a fraud. We're going over concepts that we covered at the undergraduate level, so the instructor is going ninety miles an hour. And everyone else is answering her questions without hesitation. And I'm drowning in self doubt.

As she's writing those symbols on the board, I recall what they mean. The upside down A means “for all” and the backwards E means “an element of”. Yeah, I get that. And I know the meaning of a ring and closure and the identity property. But none of it is coming together for me. And I can feel myself panicking. I just know that she can see that I'm an idiot whom they shouldn't have let into the program.

I think about my students and how this might compare to how they feel. When I taught middle school, they were seeing the concepts for the first time. So when they didn't get it, I presumed that it was like learning a foreign language, and that they had to decipher the meaning. But my current students are now seeing this material at least for the second time. So it's not so foreign, but somehow still undecipherable.

I'm sitting here in this class thinking I should know this. I studied this material as a junior at a tier one university, and I'm pretty sure I got an A in the class. I know that I've seen all of this before just like everyone else. But I couldn't spout out any of it. And I'm feeling unsure that I could prove any of the things that I'm expected to know already. So while she's up there saying that it's obvious that this set is abeliean since it has left blah blah blah, I'm fighting the urge to burst into tears and run out of the room like a teenage drama queen.

I tried relaying to my husband what it felt like. The best I could come up with was a comparison to the scene in Dances with Wolves when Stand with Fist is told the remember the white man's words and she can't because it's too painful. Or it was like when a kindergardener learns to read by phonics. They can sound out the words syllable by syllable, but they can't tell you what happened in the paragraph they just read.

I tried consoling myself by believing that this will help me to develop empathy for my students. But I want to be the smart kid that I used to be. I don't mind working towards understanding, but I don't want to feel like I'm on the brink of failure clawing my way to safety.

This isn't as fun as I thought it would be.

8 comments:

  1. keep the faith! you can do it... 6 weeks from now this is going to be a distant memory.

    I hope all of y'all are doing well. Tell the family hi for me! :-)

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  2. Remember, you're here because of the triumphs of the past, so you can build new successes. Be scared. Disequilibrium is good; it will cause you to question; it will keep you engaged in learning. If you had all the answers, what would you be learning? You can do all things through Christ Who strengthens you! Noelia

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  3. Girl! You are a Mommy of four returning to GRADUATE school after God knows how many years...give yourself a break. YOU ARE THE SMART KID, don't be so hard on yourself. Okay...here's a techinique I discovered in high school Physics...before you drift off to sleep, ask yourself the question..."What does ___________ mean or what is the answer to __________?" Put a oice of paper next to your bed and when you wake up the first thing on your ind is the RIGHT ANSWER!!! I know it sounds like a lot of crazy MOBO JUMBo, but this technique has never failed. It;s my way of tapping into the vast knowledge that I know is out there! LUV YA Sis!

    Socar

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  4. Your deep desire to be the best you can be, while being humble enough to express that which the rest of us try to keep hidden is only one of the qualities that makes you such a wonderful friend, mentor, & mother! Having the knowledge & tapping it at any given moment are 2 totally different things! Remember, as long as the enemy can keep you caught in self doubt, then he doesn't have to worry about you following the destiny God has for you! Tell him to take a hike & give it to God. Girl, you know how to go out on faith! You will get back into the swing of things; just give yourself some adjustment time! I love you! Holly

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  5. It will come back to you, it's just like riding a bike. And not knowing everything is okay, otherwise you wouldn't need to be there. You are a strong, intelligent woman - be patient it will come.

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  6. Honey...you just need to find a new way of absorbing information. The "smart kid" you want to return to was a way of learning that was pre kids, pre-life, pre-stress, pre-job. Of course you will never return to that, and thank goodness for that! You are better than the "I've memorized that yesteray" crowd now, because when it comes to applying it, you won't be the one wondering what the heck you are supposed to do with the upside down A or how it relates to a "real" example...that's when you are going to rock. Remember, the smart kids in your classes are going to be looking to you in the classroom. Hang in there. --Phoebe

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  7. When I was a grad student I asked my advisor if I would ever stop feeling insecure. She laughed and said no - but the feeling will come less frequently as the years go by...I've learned that to be true. At times I still feel like a fraud, but more often I feel like I really know what I'm doing. It just takes time and patience - and doing the same class a few times to really a good vibe going. Also, cut yourself slack and know that students are much more patient than we imagine them to be. LeeAnn

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  8. I can relate to what you're going through. I, too, just started my doctorate and I'm going through some similar issues. It's like...you know that you should already know it; but, the answers just doesn't come quick enough. Personally, I blamed my issue on age ( I'm one of the oldest - over 45- in the class.) and I can't change that. So, I just work harder and study longer to get the job done. Keep up the good work, it's all well worth it.

    Detra

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