A Little Reminder Goes a Long Way
Author: Aubrey Yeh
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My new role has been full of a lot of learning, which is GOOD. I love learning new things! At the same time, it can be hard on my confidence. Impostor Syndrome is a real thing, and I have found myself wondering how I can effectively support teachers whose jobs look very different than mine looked when I was teaching.
It’s with this mix of overwhelmed learning + “Am I really the right person for this?” that I approached the Colorado EdTechTeam Summit this year.
The day started off with a good reminder from keynote speaker Rushton Hurley
“The only person to whom you ever need to compare yourself is the you who you were yesterday.”
Are you looking in the mirror to compare, or looking out the window at everyone else?
After that, I had the opportunity to present on fun stuff: GSuite in the Arts, Spreadsheet AutoMagic, and some Google Experiment play at the playground. It reminded me (as always) that I really enjoy presenting! All of those little moments – the exclamations of “Oh, that’s awesome!”, “I am doing this with my kids on Monday!”, and “That’s so cool!” – filled my bucket. I always appreciate positive feedback (who doesn’t?), but even more this year when I have felt like such a novice in my day-to-day job.
I think God knew I needed this reminder – despite all of the new, I still have strengths to bring to the table. I have a renewed sense of efficacy in being able to serve and help teachers & students. I have so much to learn, but I also have some good background to draw on.
Passing It On
Which, of course brings me to students. How often do we focus on their weaknesses, instead of their strengths? Do we recognize the background that they bring to the table as a source of learning? Do we make them feel like they are a beginner at everything, or do we value and build on their prior knowledge? These questions are especially relevant for our students who come with different cultural backgrounds that we do.