Learning Forward Saturday
Continue reading “Wanted Back-bencher and Last-ranker Teacher” and discuss its themes.
Key Takeaways
Roma’s Strategy: To motivate her difficult class for a presentation, Roma shared her own past struggles with stage fright and low confidence. This humanised her, building trust and showing that overcoming fear is possible.
Cheating Dilemma: A student’s detailed advice on how to cheat effectively prompted a discussion on integrity, highlighted by Roma’s decision to refuse a leaked exam paper in high school.
Public Speaking as a Skill: Roma reframed the upcoming assembly as a crucial opportunity to develop critical thinking, verbal skills, and confidence, directly addressing students’ anxieties.
The “Air Hostess” Experiment: To cure her stage fright, Roma applied for an air hostess job. She passed the interview by mastering facts, proving that deep knowledge, not a memorised script, is the key to confident communication.
Topics
Context: “Wanted Back-bencher and Last-ranker Teacher” by Kavita Ghosh
The group is reading a book about Roma, an unconventional teacher who joined the profession for a certification, not by choice.
The book’s title comes from a school advertisement, reflecting Roma’s non-traditional background.
Chapter: To Copy or Not to Copy
During exams, students asked if Roma ever cheated.
Roma admitted to being caught once, prompting a student (Jeevan) to offer detailed advice on how to cheat effectively.
The Dilemma: Roma’s best friend, Rubina, offered her a leaked Class 12 board exam paper.
The Decision: Roma refused to look at the paper, choosing integrity over a guaranteed high score.
The Outcome: She never regretted the decision, finding deep satisfaction in earning her marks honestly.
Invigilation Tactic: Roma used a non-confrontational approach during an exam, returning dropped papers to students without accusation.
Rationale: This gave students the “benefit of the doubt” while subtly signalling she was aware of their attempts to cheat.
Chapter: Fear vs Courage
Staff Room Discussion: A colleague (Sumita) expressed doubt that Roma’s difficult class could deliver a successful assembly presentation.
Topic: “A Leader knows the Way, Goes the Way, and Shows the Way” (John C. Maxwell).
Student Anxiety: Roma’s students were anxious, recalling a “disastrous” presentation last year that left them feeling ridiculed and humiliated.
Roma’s Framing: Roma reframed public speaking as a vital life skill for:
Developing critical thinking
Fine-tuning verbal and non-verbal skills
Overcoming stage fright
Roma’s Personal Story: To build trust, Roma shared her own history of stage fright.
The Failure: At 15, she froze during an inter-school debate, unable to recall her prepared speech.
The Experiment: To overcome this, she applied for an air hostess job.
Method: She mastered all facts about the airline and aviation industry.
Result: She passed the interview, proving that deep knowledge, not a memorised script, builds confidence.
The Insight: Public speaking is about connecting with people using relevant information, not just delivering a speech.
Arctic Air Interview: Roma later faced a group discussion (GD) for a corporate internship.
Topic: “Women deprive men of jobs.”
Challenge: She had to navigate a competitive environment with 35 other applicants, including university debaters.
Next Steps
Participants: Reflect on personal experiences with public speaking or integrity and share them with the group.
Group: Meet next Saturday at the same time to continue reading.
Group: Note the time change for the session after schools reopen in July.