From the moment we see the schoolboys of Welton Academy transforming the tenets of their prep school, “tradition, honor, discipline, and excellence,” into the eminently more playful “travesty, horror, decadence, and excrement,” we know they’re not waiting for Superman; they’re waiting for Robin Williams, or rather John Keating, the unorthodox, visionary teacher Williams plays in Peter Weir’s Dead Poets Society(1989). Keating reminds us what the best kinds of teachers do for their students.
1) Make language and knowledge sexy:
Keating is the stick-up-the-bum headmaster’s worst nightmare and the repressed schoolboys’ greatest fantasy, second only to the towheaded cheerleaders they chase throughout the film. He gives life to words and ideas, using vivid language to make his students actually feel something and act on it. After one of his pupils (Gale Hansen) reads a poem he has copied onto the back of a centerfold, we finally get it. Keating is the kind of teacher who can make the side of the pin-up with the poem more exciting to an adolescent boy than the one with the comely lass.
2) Make yourself and the material accessible and relevant to them:
When Keating does his impression of Julius Caesar à la Marlon Brando, he carries Shakespeare off his pedestal and gives him back to the students. “Friends, Romans, and countrymen,” he grunts, Brandoesque, and the boys laugh and laugh. Shakespeare is finally one of them. More powerful still, Keating shares himself just as readily. To these schoolboys, he seems to be everywhere at once--beckoning to them, asking them to huddle up for secrets, inserting himself directly into their intellectual lives and inviting them into his.
3) Push them to transcend the classroom:
From the moment Keating pokes his playful face around the corner of the classroom, strolls through whistling, and beckons the boys to leave it, he dares them to transcend the boundaries of the room itself and what it stands for: tradition and conformity. He drives them to acts of creative whimsy, such as tearing circumscribed descriptions of poetry from textbooks with wild abandon, and beating drums, donning lipstick war paint, and reading poetry in caves. Indeed, just as he promises, around Keating, “spirits soared, women swooned, and gods were created.”
4) Teach them to see the world in a different way:
When Keating has his pupils stand on desks to see things from another perspective, he gives them a new world. He touches previously uncaressed places in their minds, spaces once free of the tickle of thought or reflection. He turns a whole class of pimple-faced, doctors, lawyers, and businessmen-to-be so high on hormones they can barely see straight into the unspeakable—poets and free thinkers.
5) Draw something out of them that they didn’t even know they had inside:
Keating is even the kind of educator who can coax from a shy, stuttering student (Ethan Hawke) Walt Whitman’s famed “barbaric yawp.” Hopefully, we’ve all had teachers like this. One of my professors in graduate school actually inspired our whole class to get up on our desks at the end of the semester and chant (you guessed it) “O Captain! My Captain!” She was our Keating, our fearless leader who asked us not merely to write poetry, but to add our very own line to the larger poem of life.


Salon.com
Comments
Regardless of egos and lauded accomplishments and endless prizes--- every single one of us is important. Many people don't seem to believe this fact. Many people never write their line of poetry, they simply live it... sometimes noticed, sometimes not.
rated with love.
Most definitely, as a teacher, the role model I aspire to.
And yes, I was lucky enough to have my own Mr. Keating back at high school.
Last I heard, he was having the time of his life . . . teaching.
Even if Keating seemed just a little good to be true--of course a school that uptight would have to kick him out--and Neil's father in particular was far too rigid and awful to be true ("You're going to go to Harvard and you're going to be a doctor" end of discussion), I loved that movie for all the reasons you state.
Thanks for the reminder!
Gabby: he really is
berry: it's true. And it would be great if more teachers encouraged their students in that way.
Jonathan: thanks, buddy
Snarky: definitely
Caracalla: hmmm, thinking…
Robin: if you've had a teacher like that, you can count yourself lucky
Romantic Poetess: total recipe for life
Vanessa: you certainly were lucky to have had one
Dave: that's so cute that you used to have your kids get up on the desks
Owl: aw, I'm glad he went with the teaching
Bellwether: that actually means a lot to me. thanks for saying that
Nelle: why, thank you!
Trudge: if only…
Cognitive Dissonance: you sound like a great teacher
Trilogy: thanks!
Shiral: I love when he does Wayne's Macbeth!
Ken: it's so sad that they try to get them out
anna1liese: yes!
Joan: ha, glad you liked
Heather
But it was no "Back to School", with Rodney Dangerfield.
With such classic lines like "If you want, you could help me with my Longfellow."............Only joking my dear................
aim: you're so sweet
sixtycandles; it's an interesting point you make. I guess he's really more into inspiring them in general than looking closely at individual poems.
Tom: oh yes he would!
blindogjohn: ha, I gotcha
themanhattankid: I see where you're coming from on the irritating thing, but I love it. And yes, the end makes me misty eyed just thinking about it.
Nicole: exactly! let's get rid of the zombies