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March 25, 2015 Featured

Teachers as Voice Over for the Student-Hero Journey

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About Colette Bennett

Colette Marie Bennett is the Curriculum Coordinator for English Language Arts, Social Studies, Library Media, and Testing for the West Haven Public School System in West Haven, Connecticut. Previous to this position, she served as the Chief Academic Officer (7-12) for Regional School System #6 in Litchfield, Connecticut. She has 23 years of teaching experience in English Language Arts from grades 6-12, including electives in journalism, drama, and film studies. A graduate of the Alternate Route to Certification, Bennett also has a Masters in English from Western Connecticut State University a 6th year in Advanced Teaching and an 092 Administrative Certificate from Sacred Heart University, and graduate credits from the GLSP in Social Studies at Wesleyan University. She holds a Literacy Certification (102) from Sacred Heart University for grades K-12. She has presented how technology is incorporated in classrooms at the Connecticut Computers in Education Conference (2010, 2012, 2014), the National Council of Teachers Annual Conference (2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015), and the Advanced Placement Annual Conference (2011) the Literacy for All Conference (2012), and the ICT for Language Learning in Florence, Italy (2014). She blogs about education at Used Books in Class: http://usedbookclassroom.wordpress.com/ She tweets at Teachcmb56@twitter.com
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Saturday, March 14th, Cornelius Minor, a Staff Developer at The Reading & Writing Project gave the luncheon keynote address to over 300 educators at the 2nd Annual Conference for  The Teaching Studio at The Learning Community, a public charter school in Central Falls, Rhode Island.

While he began his address with humor and participation, Minor quickly got to the serious matter of his topic:

"In a world of inequity, how are we giving tools to students to let them become heroes to rescue themselves?"

For those not in attendance, there could be some confusion on Minor's use of the term "hero"; the word is commonly associated with superhero characters from the Marvel or DC Comics. Minor himself even referenced the superhero Batman in his speech in order to make his claim that teachers are the voice-overs in their students' lives. He suggested that teachers could emulate the voice of Batman's mentor, Lucius Fox who is played in the films by the actor Morgan Freeman.

The role of the mentor as the "voice-over" is an integral part of the hero's journey archetype. In the classic hero's journey, in film and in literature, there are twelve (12) steps.  Step 1 begins in the Ordinary World, when the hero hears a Call to Adventure (step 2), which He or She initially Refuses (step 3). By step 4, the hero encounters someone who can give him advice in order to prepare for the journey ahead. That someone in step 4 is The Mentor, a character that students are already familiar with some examples from films.

Students at every grade level can name film mentors such as Glinda from the Wizard of Oz, mentor to Dorothy; Obi-Wan Kenobi from Star Wars, mentor to Luke Skywalker; and Gandalf, mentor to both Hobbits, Frodo and Bilbo Baggins, in the the Lord of the Rings trilogy.

Minor, however, asked his audience to turn from cinema's world of fantasy in order to suggest the role the ordinary teacher plays everyday is as powerful as these other mentors.

"Think about that Morgan Freeman voiceover in the movie.... to 'Be the Batman,'"intoned Minor enthusiastically in order to illustrate that students need to hear that voice-over in their heads to "Be the hero" in their own lives.

While teachers may lack the gravely voice of Morgan Freeman, teachers can help their students when they decide to Cross the First Threshold into adventure (step 5) and meet Tests, Allies, Enemies (step 6) before taking a New Approach (step 7) when setbacks occur day by day, grade by grade.

Just as the characters in epic literature or in film Confront Ordeals (step 8), teachers in real life can contribute by helping students Achieve Success and Rewards (step 9) as they prepare to Return to the Ordinary World with new knowledge (step 10). Helping students achieve success is critical to prepare students for future tests, both literal and figurative (step 11), and the final step 12 is when students finally complete the journey with knowledge, literally the "elixir", which will be used to help others.

The response to Minor's rhetorical question,"how are we giving tools to students to let them become heroes to rescue themselves?" is "through encouragement."
Screenshot 2015-03-18 07.05.37
Yes, teachers give students the academic tools of reading, writing, and computation, but encouraging students to use these tools to move forward on their own journeys is the ultimate goal.
Like that film counterpart who imparts the words of advice and encouragement to the young hero, the teacher can be the voice-over that plays in the mind of a student. In this kind of voice-over, however, teachers don't need to sound like Morgan Freeman to encourage their students ...but it would really be cool if we did!
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