Anonymous member:
I'm so sorry fellow colleagues but I need to gripe. I teach 4 periods of year ... More so than any other year I've taught (this is my 24th year), the apathy, whininess, and entitlement is the absolute WORST I have come across. God forbid I ask them to do ANY work; god forbid if they don't earn an "A" grade, even if they don't do any work; god forbid I grade a messy, scribblely, didn't-follow-the-directions project a "D" or 50% (and I'm being VERY generous). Then I get the parents contacting me with the same complaints; as I explain to both parents and students why they earned the grade they did, I get "this class doesn't matter anyway." In the past, I've had my handful of students in every class who behave this way; this year it appears that over 80% of them this year behave this way... Thanks for reading my complaints. (edited for length)
No blame here but take a moment to self reflect if you’re “phoning it in,” using the same lessons you’ve been using for 20+ years… if you’ve lost your own excitement over the material the students may be subconsciously reacting to that. I had a similar issue and decided to do 50% new lessons every year keeping it fresh for me and my students.
Again NO accusations here, just food for thought. I’ve been teaching art for 35 years now and am trying to keep it fresh till I retire in 4 years.
As seasoned teachers, we know what lessons work and which ones don’t. But at some point, we can get caught in a “rut” doing what is comfortable. We’re getting older. Rolling out of bed at 5:30 in the morning before the sun is up to drive in the dark to school gets old. So, if we honestly self-reflect, our exhaustion; physical, mental, social, perhaps even spiritual is tested on a daily basis.
It is no surprise that even if we put on our “happy teacher mask” that the reality of our existence might just leak into our ability to motivate and excite our students. It is easy for a new 20-year-old educator to excite their students. They are only a few years older and of a similar generation. Heck, they still likely play video games and go out to dance.
Me, near 60, am nearly twice removed from the generation I teach. Of course, I am in danger of “losing touch” with my students. It would be unusual if I did naturally and easily relate.
So how do I continue to excite and motivate my students?
1. I stay in touch with their interest with social media. (Currently TikTok) This helps me keep up with their interests and language. I even see art that excites them and is “trending.”
2. I actually play 2 rounds of Mario Kart with my spouse before bed. It’s a popular game my students enjoy. At the end of the semester, we have a period to turn in books and close grades, we also play Mario Kart and I kick their butts!
3. I add their music, from time to time, when appropriate, to my classroom play list. I play this music softly in the background when they’re working on projects.
4. I dropped my academic approach to teaching art. More on that HERE. I keep in mind that only 2% of students will enter an art related career.
5. I submit a few of my lessons for publication every year, and publish them on my own.
6. 25 - 50% of my lessons are NEW TO ME, every year.
This last one, I think, is the key to my success in keeping my students interested. New lessons are challenging to me. They keep me on my toes. I can’t “phone it in,” because if I do, I will fail. I bookmark new lessons when I see them on social media. I email links to my school account to add to my calendar. I find new lessons motivate me because I know, if successful, I will share them with my online community. Some are just a new twist on an old lesson like my lesson on Perspective with A.I., but many are completely new to me like my Origami Color Wheels, which got published by School Arts Magazine and made the cover!
I teach, but I also publish. Many of you do too on platforms like “Teachers Pay Teachers.” New lessons can become a source of income. If you build up enough of them, they can be valuable stream of income for your retirement. I began publishing my lessons in 2010, and now these publications pay my mortgage! That did not happen overnight, it took years. Perhaps 10, before it became significant enough to matter. This is an important motivator to keep me doing new lessons and keeping my students interested.
The bottom line is that I AM the adult in the room.
Instead of saying “kids these days…”, when my lesson falls flat, and students don’t seem to care, I turn my reflection inward and ask, “have I lost touch? Do I need to drop that lesson, or re-tool it?”


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