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To Teach All Students
I used to work as a teacher of English in a high school in China. This school was
considered the best of the city because it was founded by the government and equipped with the
strictly-selected teachers and the most advanced teaching facilities of the time. Even though it
was a public school, students needed to pay what they would have paid for private schools since
they would receive the best teaching service. Besides paying high tuition fees, students had to
pass the entrance exam to be admitted to this school. The school had an enormous reputation for
its students’ high academic performance. Thus, it was very popular in the city. My focus at work
was how to engage students in learning, which has been my professional interest since the early
days of my teaching career. The promotion of student involvement in learning enabled me to
soon establish myself as a high quality teacher. I was proud of my work because my students’
English proficiency was evaluated by experts of English teaching as three levels higher than that
of students of the same grade. Actually, I believed every teacher at this school was gratified in
that we were all selected by the government to work here because of our excellent teaching
performance. I didn’t really think about who my students were, which I was not aware of at that
time.
Perhaps, I was with my students every day without contacting any student outside this
school so that I was too close to see who they were. It continued this way until one year, on the
day of the school’s entrance exam I experienced what was quite provoking to me. I witnessed
how prospective students who participated in the exam reacted to the exam results. Some were
ecstatic about being accepted to the school while many others burst into loud sobs the minute
they realized they failed. It never came to my mind that my school’s entrance exam would have
such a huge emotional impact on so many elementary graduates of the city. I couldn’t help but
feeling like consoling the students who were crying and who would not become my students, or
more precisely, the students of my school. They made me think about the students I taught.
It was at this moment I started to ask myself “Who are my students?” My students were
predominantly the children of local government officers whose political status decided that they
could afford paying a lot more extra money to send their child to my school. In China, the
government has the tradition to select its officers from intellectuals. Based on that, I could infer
my students’ parents, in general, had received college or university education. Putting all the
factors together, I was now able to see the social background of my students: intellectual families
of the high political, socioeconomic class. Also, through my interaction with parents, I knew they
were very supportive of teachers because they themselves were beneficiaries of education.
Moreover, my students’ success in passing the school entrance exam implied that they were high
academic performers. In a word, I and my colleagues literally taught elite students in terms of
everything. Their hign academic performance was not just because we taught well. Compared to
our counterparts at other schools, I and my colleagues were doing an easy job. What if my
students were from lower socioeconomic classes? What if my students’ parents were not
supportive of my work? What if my students were the ones who couldn’t pass the entrance exam?
Would it be the same easy to engage them in learning? Would they be able to learn three times
better? I realized the social injustice that had been created by the local government through the
founding of this particular school. I was not the cause of the injustice; however, I had a vested
interested in this school. I as well as my colleagues was contributing to social inequality, even
though unintentionally. In this school, teachers only served the social elites. Having realized all
this, I started to feel ashamed of myself for having been self-contented about my teaching
outcomes. During the rest of my teaching years in China, I was more and more aware that I was
perpetuating social injustice. But, there was not much that I could do. It was hard for me, a
system’s beneficiary, to challenge or criticize the system. I left China with the realization that
teachers needed to teach all students to promote social justice.
Then, I came to Canada and worked as a Mandarin teacher at a private school in Montreal
for a few years. Unlike my students in China, my Mandarin students were very much diversified
in terms of race, ethnicity, culture, age, and socioeconomic status. They were between 3- 12
years old. About half of them were from middle class, and the rest were from lower middle class.
Holding my belief in social justice, I was working diligently to reach all my students.
Nevertheless, it was challenging to involve all students equally as well as enable every single of
them to truly learn. One of my biggest obstacles was that students of the same grade had
different Mandarin proficiency and I had to teach them at the same time. It was through
reflecting on who my students were and what they needed that I worked out some ways to
engage different students. For instance, the students from Chinese immigrant families usually
learned more easily, so I engaged them as student teachers to help other students. Most students
from other culture groups shared the same motivation for learning Mandarin: they would like to
visit China one day; therefore, my teaching was focused on practicality. It was crucial to always
look for the areas where Chinese-background students wouldn’t get bored and meanwhile non-
Chinese students would still have confidence to learn.
I currently teach English as a second language at a secondary French public school in
Quebec. My students, like the ones I had at the private school, also come from various culture
and language backgrounds, but a big portion of them are from low social economic families.
Students’ English proficiencies vary greatly from highly advanced to basic as I have all types of
students, for example students who are Anglophones, students who are Francophone but grew up
in the bilingual environment of Montreal, and students who just arrived in Canada and never
learned English before. I have to differentiate my teaching to maximize the learning of each
individual student. I always keep in mind that I should take into consideration students’ needs,
abilities, and interests in order to help them more effectively.
Teaching all students means different challenges at different times as every learning
context is unique. My humble opinion is that no matter what, we teachers should strive to teach
all students to achieve our teaching and educational goals as well as eliminate injustice in
schools.

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Teaching philosophy to teach all students

  • 1. To Teach All Students I used to work as a teacher of English in a high school in China. This school was considered the best of the city because it was founded by the government and equipped with the strictly-selected teachers and the most advanced teaching facilities of the time. Even though it was a public school, students needed to pay what they would have paid for private schools since they would receive the best teaching service. Besides paying high tuition fees, students had to pass the entrance exam to be admitted to this school. The school had an enormous reputation for its students’ high academic performance. Thus, it was very popular in the city. My focus at work was how to engage students in learning, which has been my professional interest since the early days of my teaching career. The promotion of student involvement in learning enabled me to soon establish myself as a high quality teacher. I was proud of my work because my students’ English proficiency was evaluated by experts of English teaching as three levels higher than that of students of the same grade. Actually, I believed every teacher at this school was gratified in that we were all selected by the government to work here because of our excellent teaching performance. I didn’t really think about who my students were, which I was not aware of at that time. Perhaps, I was with my students every day without contacting any student outside this school so that I was too close to see who they were. It continued this way until one year, on the day of the school’s entrance exam I experienced what was quite provoking to me. I witnessed how prospective students who participated in the exam reacted to the exam results. Some were ecstatic about being accepted to the school while many others burst into loud sobs the minute they realized they failed. It never came to my mind that my school’s entrance exam would have such a huge emotional impact on so many elementary graduates of the city. I couldn’t help but
  • 2. feeling like consoling the students who were crying and who would not become my students, or more precisely, the students of my school. They made me think about the students I taught. It was at this moment I started to ask myself “Who are my students?” My students were predominantly the children of local government officers whose political status decided that they could afford paying a lot more extra money to send their child to my school. In China, the government has the tradition to select its officers from intellectuals. Based on that, I could infer my students’ parents, in general, had received college or university education. Putting all the factors together, I was now able to see the social background of my students: intellectual families of the high political, socioeconomic class. Also, through my interaction with parents, I knew they were very supportive of teachers because they themselves were beneficiaries of education. Moreover, my students’ success in passing the school entrance exam implied that they were high academic performers. In a word, I and my colleagues literally taught elite students in terms of everything. Their hign academic performance was not just because we taught well. Compared to our counterparts at other schools, I and my colleagues were doing an easy job. What if my students were from lower socioeconomic classes? What if my students’ parents were not supportive of my work? What if my students were the ones who couldn’t pass the entrance exam? Would it be the same easy to engage them in learning? Would they be able to learn three times better? I realized the social injustice that had been created by the local government through the founding of this particular school. I was not the cause of the injustice; however, I had a vested interested in this school. I as well as my colleagues was contributing to social inequality, even though unintentionally. In this school, teachers only served the social elites. Having realized all this, I started to feel ashamed of myself for having been self-contented about my teaching outcomes. During the rest of my teaching years in China, I was more and more aware that I was
  • 3. perpetuating social injustice. But, there was not much that I could do. It was hard for me, a system’s beneficiary, to challenge or criticize the system. I left China with the realization that teachers needed to teach all students to promote social justice. Then, I came to Canada and worked as a Mandarin teacher at a private school in Montreal for a few years. Unlike my students in China, my Mandarin students were very much diversified in terms of race, ethnicity, culture, age, and socioeconomic status. They were between 3- 12 years old. About half of them were from middle class, and the rest were from lower middle class. Holding my belief in social justice, I was working diligently to reach all my students. Nevertheless, it was challenging to involve all students equally as well as enable every single of them to truly learn. One of my biggest obstacles was that students of the same grade had different Mandarin proficiency and I had to teach them at the same time. It was through reflecting on who my students were and what they needed that I worked out some ways to engage different students. For instance, the students from Chinese immigrant families usually learned more easily, so I engaged them as student teachers to help other students. Most students from other culture groups shared the same motivation for learning Mandarin: they would like to visit China one day; therefore, my teaching was focused on practicality. It was crucial to always look for the areas where Chinese-background students wouldn’t get bored and meanwhile non- Chinese students would still have confidence to learn. I currently teach English as a second language at a secondary French public school in Quebec. My students, like the ones I had at the private school, also come from various culture and language backgrounds, but a big portion of them are from low social economic families. Students’ English proficiencies vary greatly from highly advanced to basic as I have all types of students, for example students who are Anglophones, students who are Francophone but grew up
  • 4. in the bilingual environment of Montreal, and students who just arrived in Canada and never learned English before. I have to differentiate my teaching to maximize the learning of each individual student. I always keep in mind that I should take into consideration students’ needs, abilities, and interests in order to help them more effectively. Teaching all students means different challenges at different times as every learning context is unique. My humble opinion is that no matter what, we teachers should strive to teach all students to achieve our teaching and educational goals as well as eliminate injustice in schools.