“When
it comes to the quality of a child’s education, it’s all about the teacher.”
In
fact, according to an analysis of the world’s top education systems by
McKinsey & Company, “Research has shown that
of all the controllable factors influencing student achievement, the most
important by far is the influence of the classroom teacher.”
An
inspiring teacher can turn nothing into something, a negative into a positive.
In return, the students talk excitedly about what they learn in class and
develop curiosity to learn more about the subject.
In the
international stage, the structure of the teaching profession differs from
country to country. These countries record top scores year after year in
international examinations, putting them in the lead in education quality.
John
Merrow, a teacher and education journalist, shares in his book The Influence of Teachers on the importance of the teacher-student
relationship and its power to transform individual lives and society as a
whole.
Meanwhile,
New York Times columnist David Brooks commented, “If I had to summarize the progress we’ve made in education
over the last decade, it’s that we’ve moved beyond the illusion that we could
restructure our way to a good education system and we’ve finally begun to focus
on the core issue: the nature of the relationship between the teacher and the
student. People learn from people they love. Anything that enriches the space
between a student and a teacher is good. Anything that makes it more frigid is
bad…Rigorous instruction has to flow on threads of trust and affection.”