Nobody likes conflict in the
workplace, especially when it impacts the way you do your job. But
that’s exactly when you know you have to do something about it. A
teacher gets evaluated by administrators, colleagues, parents, and
oftentimes students.
Occasionally when those
evaluations are uncomplimentary, they can lead to conflicts. The teacher
becomes defensive and perhaps avoids those people, and maybe even
becomes negative about the job. So what is a teacher to do?
It’s always good to be open and
willing to hear the other side. If you approach the person with whom you
disagree with respect and openmindedness, you can turn the conflict
into more of a misunderstanding, and a misunderstanding can be cleared
up with a mere conversation.
Teaching is a service profession
(perhaps the term “public servant” goes a little too far?), therefore
you need to exercise a little customer service. If you called the phone
company to discuss an error on a bill and were only met with negativity
and insensitivity, you’d be horrified and dismayed. So when someone
comes to you to express disappointment, be willing to work with them to
improve. Provide them with the good service they expect (and dare I say
deserve).
I supervised a student teacher
who was constantly told what a wonderful job she was doing. At one
point, however, her cooperating teacher confronted her with harsh
criticism from the principal. Now, the principal, herself, never
expressed any of it to the student teacher, so the situation got tricky.
But I advised her to approach the principal and invite her in to
observe a lesson which she anticipated would be fun and enjoyable for
the class. Even though the student teacher couldn’t openly address the
conflict, she could improve the principal’s opinion of her if she
“killed (her) with kindness.”
One time, in my own teaching
experience, I had a reading buddy class and we met once a week for the
students to pair up and read together. Everything was going fine for the
first few months; the other teacher and I would chit-chat while the
students read. Then one day the other teacher started to give me the
cold shoulder. Instead of our usual conversations, she started bringing
in work to correct and would head to a desk and put her face in a stack
of papers, not even saying hello to me. I put up with it for a couple
months, and then I had to say something.
So, very meekly one day, I
approached her and asked if there was something I had done to upset her.
She told me that she found out I was friends with a married male
teacher who was known to be having an affair with another teacher, and
she just couldn’t approve of my friendship with him. While it didn’t
totally resolve our conflict, my addressing her at least made me aware
of her problem with me and we were able to agree to disagree.
There is always going to be
conflict, even if it’s just a disagreement with how another teacher
disciplines (or maybe doesn’t discipline). You can’t control what other
people will get worked up about, but you can control your side of it.
Pick your battles wisely. You have to see these people everyday, and it
can be very lonely when your only conversations during the day are with
children.
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