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It is not often mentioned, but William Shakespeare was one of the great writers on the subject of education. Pondering his inspiring words is of immeasurable help to me as I go about my duties as a college teacher. At the beginning of every semester, one encounters the desperate students who will do anything to get an override into my full class. As Richard III said in his own moment of desperation: "A course, a course! My kingdom for a course!" Then at the end of the semester, when all the students' work is in and all of the exams have been given, there comes the question: What grades to assign? Do they pass or do they fail? My dilemma is not unlike that of Hamlet, the melancholy Dane: "An E or not an E, that is the question." And finally, when I feel that I am in danger of losing my way, of forgetting the fundamental purpose which all of my pedagogical efforts are intended to serve, the immortal words of Marc Antony always keep me on course: "I come to bury students, not to praise them."
2 responses total.
It's Poe for me.. "Rappin' raven came a rap, rap, rappin'.."
Do none of your students inspire to advise, "Get thee to a nunnery"?
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