In one of Billy Collins’ poems called “In the Moment,” the narrator describes an idyllic June day, the kind that, in his words, gives you no choice but to pour yourself a tall glass of iced tea, “unbutton your shirt/ and sit outside in a rough wooden chair.” As the poem continues, the narrator takes note of a fly that lands on his wrist, two black butterflies with mottled specks of red and white on their wings—and for a moment, he is acutely mindful of his surroundings. But the moment is fleeting. Suddenly he is dragged into a series of trivial musings: Where was George Herbert buried? Why is that guy in the pickup truck speeding? What am I going to make my guests for dinner? I had no idea they were vegetarian. Why didn’t they tell me before? And just like that, the narrator’s moment withers.
This is a long segue into what we really want to talk about: being a mindful teacher.
Teachers are busy. Your work begins well before your students get to school and carries on into the evenings and weekends as you evaluate student work, plan new activities and shoulder the emotional baggage that comes with the territory.
Considering that, we want to ask you a question: When was the last time you had a metaphysical moment? In other words, when was the last time you thought about what you were thinking about something?
Huh?
Let’s put it another way: When was the last time you were fully present with you inner experience and its relationship to your outer environment? If it sounds a little “new-agey” just hang on for a minute. There’s a reason we’re asking:
When teachers are fully present (that is, when they are mindful) in their classrooms, they can’t help but be more effective. The same goes for students. You know what it looks like when students are in the moment. You can visualize it right now. You also know what it looks like when students are tired, disengaged, discouraged. But have you stopped what you were doing to be fully mindful of these experiences? Here are 5 ways you can incorporate mindful teaching into your daily life and your classroom.
Zen and the Art of Teaching: Mindfulness Exercises for Educators
1. Mindfulness begins on the morning commute
The exact moment you transition from “you-you” to “teacher-you” is somewhat ambiguous, but important to reflect on. What if you were to bring mindfulness to this transitional period as you make your morning commute? As you drive, bike, ride the train, take note of your physical environment. What does it look like? Where are you mentally? Are you already in the classroom? If you are, why? Are you paying an overdue credit card bill? Are you annoyed by the traffic?
Now ask yourself this: How would I usually respond to this situation? How am I responding to it now? The more in tune you are with the relationship between your inner experience and outer environment, the more skillful you will become at managing that relationship when you need to. If you thought, hey, this activity can be used both inside and outside of the classroom, you are exactly right.
2. Stop everything before you begin your day
Most of us have a set routine when we get to school: Pour the third cup of coffee, turn the computer on, respond to a couple of emails, respond to a few papers—the ones you kept shuffling to the bottom of the pile last night. Do these activities have a clear beginning and end? In other words, do you end up typing three or four concluding sentences or reading one final paragraph while your students trickle in?
It’s tempting to squeeze the juice out of every moment before “it” really begins, isn’t it? But there’s a costly tradeoff. Sure, you may have gotten through one more email, but did you notice the energy, demeanor, attitude, vibe of your students as they trickled in? Did you greet each student by name and say hello? Did they say hello to you? Whether or not you know it, you are incredibly adroit at reading body language…take advantage of this skill. If the first time you become mindful of the classroom dynamic is during attendance, you’ve missed a lot of valuable information about them.
3. Starting Class
OK. So you’ve made your morning commute; you went through your rituals (coffee, email, Facebook, prep); you’ve “read” your students as they entered the classroom. Now what? How do you begin the class in a mindful way? Let’s say it’s Friday. Your students are a bit more lively than usual. How do you capture their attention? How do you compete and meet their energy level? You don’t.
Save your energy by trying some of these techniques:
4. Are you mindful of what’s working? Are you mindful of what’s not working?
There are deadlines. There are goals. There are administrators and parents we have to answer to, so it can be a temptation to push through an activity, a discussion, a lecture, whatever, even when something clearly isn’t working.
When this happens, try stopping and say, “Hey, something’s up. How is everyone feeling right now?” This may surprise your students the first or second time it happens. If that happens, describe to them what you are seeing (or think you are seeing); tell them how you are interpreting that behavior; then ask them if your interpretation of that behavior is accurate.
Here’s another idea: When something is working, why not stop what you’re doing to fully take it in and experience it? Then, at the end of class (or what the heck, try it while it’s happening), share your observations with your students and vice versa.
5. What’s 5 minutes, really?
Like we said in our last blog post, the way you start and end the day sets the tone for your classroom experience. After you take attendance, take the first (or last) 5 minutes of class to ask your students a question about something—anything, really. Maybe you have a current event you’d like to share with your students. Maybe you have an anecdote or a joke, or you simply wish to know how their weekend was. Go around the room and have your students tell you what they did or what they want to do next weekend. Once everyone has spoken, tell them something you did or plan on doing.
You may already know this, but we’re continually (and pleasantly) surprised by how curious students are about our lives outside the classroom. When we have a relationship with our students, they will want to know where we go, where we eat and what movies we like. It’s cool to mention a restaurant or a movie in class and have your students come back on Monday and tell you that they ate at the same place or rented the same movie simply because you recommended it.
As much as we’d like to claim these ideas as our own, much of this has been adapted from Deborah Schoeberlein’s book, Mindful Teaching and Teaching Mindfulness. We highly recommend it.
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