I always had trouble in school. Not because I was not a good student, or overly-naughty or pelted the front-row kids with chewed paper pellets. In fact, I was all the contrary: bright and talented. The trouble was that I was pretty smart. I didn’t want to show off, so I’d often sit in silence.
Then, some other day, when one of my teachers would say something inaccurate, I would correct them. This moment would be the end of my peace. Eventually, after a few episodes, I was “noticed”. Since then, I would be the official “smart ass” which also subtly means – The Outcast.
I would later join Ikuu High School for my O-levels. Here, I met three teachers who managed to teach the well-read kid that I was, and who largely became my career mentors.
A History teacher – a wonderful woman named Ms. Norah. She had extraordinary wisdom, who’d patiently listen to my half-baked theories that the Egyptian pyramids had exact replicas in Cambodia. Yes, that’s right. I had stumbled into a hard cover with a beautiful moldy smell at the school library.
Our English and Literature teacher, called Mr. Kibonge. A pleasant, well-read and relatively elderly gentleman. He often reminded me of my father, especially when he’d get nostalgic narrating their escapades in the glorious campus riots of the 80’s as a student at Nairobi University.
He made campus seem extremely cool.
The third teacher taught us Biology. A bright, lanky gentleman who helped me believe in my talent and abilities. His classes were fun, he’d literally sing us through difficult classes. Like those unnecessarily-difficult binomial nomenclature classes we all hated.
These noble teachers didn’t take my questions as insults. A lot of times, I would question their actions.
“Why do you do this? Why do you do that?”
Or, more embarrassingly, their grasp of knowledge.
“I’ve read in the book it was this… or this… and you said that… and that…”
I would even correct the poor teachers in front of their students. They never took it personally, and even if I hurt their ego, they never showed it. Instead, they encouraged me to go further, try to complete my knowledge, and always seek the right answer.
As teachers, they never saw me as pestering, or felt their power would be destroyed, or imbalanced, by my questions. They literally behaved as “information vessels”.
I would later graduate with a Bachelor of Education degree. I’m presently on my fifth year under the Teachers Service Commission (TSC). As fresh graduates join my school, I have a professional, social and self-empowerment pep talk laid out.
First, to remember that a good teacher values knowledge more than his ego, and is willing to expand his abilities even if it means acknowledging he is not superior to his students. Next, the importance of a good banking partner to walk them through their financial goals with family and investment after employment.
Co-op Bank is a great pick for a long-term career financial partner.
The award-winning bank has built accommodative packages based on a long-term financial relationship with a fresh customer. Once a new government employee, say a TSC teacher – opens a salary account, they immediately qualify for a mobile loan up to Ksh500,000 for simpler, small buys like furniture and electronic appliances.
In just six months, they qualify for a personal loan of up to Ksh4 Million for major purchases like land, cars or other investments like shares and government bonds. The earlier one begins to build their portfolio, the better and easier it is.
And, it’s all easy to join the Co-op Bank fraternity with just your national identity card as a requirement. The best you can pick as an employee is the Co-op Bank Salary Account, with a zero balance.
Also Read: https://www.ghafla.co.ke/sponsored/dilemma-how-do-i-apologize-to-my-parents-for-failing-my-exams/