By Gilda G. Acosta
Contributor
Your teaching cannot be anything but good when—as far as you concerned—it is a labor of love and as far as an observer is concerned, it is a piece of work done by someone who has the earmarks of a mentor.
Of course, love for your work alone cannot in any manner guarantee that your performance will be excellent, but no matter how skillful you are, if you do not really care for your profession, you will never make an outstanding teacher.
Teaching, especially in the elementary grades, is one occupation that cannot and does not depend for success upon intellectual brilliance and mechanical proficiency alone; it requires deep-seated love and warmth of the human spirit in order that it may be truly effective, because the principal medium in which teaching id done is not the classroom and its furnishings and equipment but the growing boys and girls who work, play, laugh and live in that room. It is a necessity for young children to love and be loved as they grow older and presumably, better each day.
Nobody likes a teacher who is all brain but no heart and no teacher has ever been really successful who does not love her work.
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