How great teachers change lives
When I look in life’s rear-vision mirror, I don’t see an inevitable and steady career progression. I see a game of Snakes and Ladders.
There were plenty of snakes down in the long grass of organisational politics. None more venomous than calling out hypocrisy.
The ladders came by hard work and hunches but I had help. I had four extraordinary teachers. As the academic and school year draws to a close, this story salutes them and their ilk.
As a callow, insecure grade five child, two years in to a five-year sentence as a boarder, I lucked-in with a Welsh teacher of English Literature.
Paul Davies (always Mr Davies) would bang his desk in time to the beat of the lines from Tennyson and Yeats, which were broadcast in a loud Welsh accent.
I still remember him reading Tennyson’s ‘The Eagle’, as he walked slowly between the row of desks. Each boy watching him nervously as the minute hand of the class clock, ticked through treacle to lunch time.
“He claps the crag with crooked hands;
Close to the sun in lonely lands,
Ringed with the azure world, he stands.”
Mr Davis’ lessons were percussive, riveting and a little frightening. He taught that language had cadence and it could be mystical and dangerous. I was hooked.
I went to Kensington Park Adult College in Adelaide for Year 12. It’s not there anymore. Pity. It had great teachers. There was one teacher, a balding, non-descript man, who taught Classical Studies.
I will call him ‘Clive’, although that may have been his surname. I enrolled in his subject thinking I’d rather stick a pin in my eye. By Easter, he’d reeled me in. Clive breathed classical Greece and Rome.
Every couple of years, he and his wife toured through the archaeological galleries of Italy, Greece and Turkey. He’d bring back pictures of excavations at Pompeii or of jewelled necklaces worn by noble Roman women.
Clive was a ‘word painter’. As students, we could see the walls of Troy and hear the oars of the Greek battle fleet turn in their rollicks, as they rowed on that ‘wine dark sea’ to get Helen back.
We rode with Hannibal over the Alps as he vanquished the Roman armies at Lake Trasimeni and Cannae. The Battle of Cannae in 216 BC, was the greatest slaughter of men since the Somme, more than 2000 years later.
We stood with the great Germanicus, who in the reign of Tiberius, had to put down a dangerous Roman troop revolt on the north-western frontier. They wanted more pay.
He offered them a load of dodgy promises and in a theatrical flourish, pulled out his sword and proclaimed, “If I’m lying, I’ll kill myself for Rome!” A young soldier walked forward, offered his sword and said, “Use mine. It’s sharper.”
Clive taught us about art and tragedy. He showed us that the lusts and power plays of men and women in the ancient world, mirrored those of today.
Later, at Flinders University, I enrolled in the three disciplines that almost guaranteed you long-term unemployment: political science, English Literature and philosophy. Those subjects became the trinity of my working life.
In the philosophy department, I met a lecturer who was to have a significant influence on me, although I never told him so.
Rodney Allen taught moral philosophy. His classes were challenging. God-help you if you came unprepared – unless you could argue that being unprepared gave you an advantage in debate.
Because that’s what we did for two hours every week. We argued and debated.
What’s wrong with bayoneting babies? Do foetuses have rights? Do dogs think? If they do, so what? What constitutes you as opposed to being something else? Is democracy really democracy?
There were blazing rows and occasional tears. I soon realised if I was going to get anywhere in life, I had to read, think and argue. Rodney would end a seminar by saying, ‘If you’re not confused, you’re not thinking.”
I’ve been confused ever since but I have earned some insight in to that condition, thanks to his wisdom. Rodney Allen was one of the great teachers of philosophy. He made people think.
Sally White ran the journalism program at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT). She learnt reporting from Graham Perkin, the editor of The Age in the late 1960s and 70s.
Sally was tough. I thought I was hot stuff because I’d been to Beijing and published a story in Melbourne on some student protests.
Later, the Chinese government would demonstrate what it thought of student protests and their calls for democracy, at Tiananmen Square.
My stories came back from Sally awash in red ink. ‘You’ve buried the intro’, ‘where are the verbs?’ ‘This is defamatory!’ ‘Shocking grammar!’ ‘Rewrite and resubmit’ I got that a lot. Rewrite and resubmit.
Sally White knocked the stuffing out of me and in doing so, taught me to write simply. She taught me to check the facts and then check them again. She also taught me that I had an ethical responsibility to those I reported on and to the readership.
I don’t know why these teachers entered my life when they did. I was floundering and being a male in my teens and 20s, I was too proud to ask for help.
They reached down, pulled me on board and like a crewman on Ulysses’ boat, I set sail with them bound for distant shores. When I got off, I never wrote to thank them, until now.
Those teachers were passing on to me things they had been taught by their teachers; knowledge they’d gained through conquering adversity and the passionate exploration of their craft or discipline.
But it was more than that. What they taught me transcended career skills. They taught me about life.