alexr_rwx: (communist underneath)
Alex R ([personal profile] alexr_rwx) wrote2012-04-13 11:59 pm

flashback to poor teaching

Recently I've been thinking a lot about teaching.

In 1999 or so, I was in high school Spanish class, and we were talking about the Spanish Civil War. Somehow or another the teacher managed to make it seem simultaneously boring, complicated, and morally ambiguous. This being a war in which a (basically) Fascist movement overthrew a republic, Hitler did air strikes against innocent civilians in the Basque Country, and Anarchists, Communists, and George Orwell fought the Fascists, unsuccessfully. And then there was a dictatorship until the 1970s.

Truly a monumental achievement, in the realm of teaching poorly. I'll be OK in the Fall if I can just channel that experience, and do the opposite.

Oh, and! I'm up to 24 students enrolled in my class :) Had to increase the enrollment cap, yessss.

[identity profile] mindstalk.livejournal.com 2012-04-14 06:35 am (UTC)(link)
Was the teacher from the US or from Spain, or elsewhere? Leaving aside our own political variability, I'm told there's still a strong pro-Franco component to Spain. They never publicly repudiated Franco and fascism, just sort of sidled onward. Pinochet's similar for Chile I think, even though he did step down; tourist guides say "DON'T GO SHOOTING YOUR MOUTH OFF ABOUT PINOCHET THEY MIGHT LIKE HIM."

So might be less incompetent teaching than deliberate spin. Maybe.