Literacies Profile
When I reflect on what it means to
be literate, I would usually associate the term with being able to read and
write. After my first SED 407 class, I learned that being literate doesn’t
necessarily have to relate to academics, but it can be used as a way to
describe a skill one has mastered. Although I would naturally refer myself as
being first and foremost literate in reading, because it has always been a
passion of mine, outside of academics, I am literate in playing the acoustic
guitar.
Growing up, I had always carried
within me a love for the guitar. Although by the age of five my mother had
different plans for me, such as playing the violin, there was always something
about the guitar that fascinated me. From the age of five to eighteen, I
mastered the art of playing the violin—however, it was every Friday after
school that I dreaded, for I had violin lessons and everything inside of me
detested the drive to the lessons. Violin, to me, sparked no interest in me and
when I don’t have a passion for something, it is very hard for me to find
enjoyment in learning about it. Every Friday after my violin lessons I would
walk by a room that held a private lesson between a student, the instructor and
their guitars. I remember sitting in the lobby area waiting for the ride to
take me home, and becoming immersed into the musical notes between the teacher
and student. Although violin is a beautiful instrument, I wanted to feel what
the student appeared to be feeling. I remember seeing his eyes closed, and his
fingers gracefully yet sporadically plucking at each string, entranced in his
instrument while singing his own lyrics that he had written himself. That was
the day I knew I was meant to play the guitar.
In playing the violin, sure there
can be moments when one is lost within the music—yet I couldn’t get myself to
feel what one feels that is passionate towards the violin, because for some
reason I was certain that I could find that sensation with the guitar. It was
on my eighteenth birthday that my sister bought me an acoustic guitar for
Christmas. As soon as I unwrapped my gift, I started playing (although not very
well). The day after Christmas, I had made an appointment with a guitar instructor.
After three months of practicing
guitar, my instructor had expressed how he found it so strange that I picked up
on the guitar so easily. My three months of playing had sounded like I had
played the guitar for a year, apparently. I believe my natural skill in playing
guitar came from the many years of playing Violin. My fingers were used to
switching between strings, and my mind had already become accustomed to the
memorization of music notes and strings.
This literacy practice has had such
an impact on my life because playing the guitar is cathartic for me. In
admiring the student who played the guitar the next room from me, I learned
patience. I couldn’t quite step out of my mother’s expectations when I was in
high school, yet as soon as my eighteenth birthday arrived, I made the
executive decision to finally go after what I truly desired. Learning a new
instrument can be tedious—especially if one turns to the playing of an
instrument to release built up tension. If I were to have a bad day, it would
be doubly frustrating if I couldn’t express my emotions through the guitar
because I lacked in the mastery of playing it at that time. I believe patience
and resilience are crucial traits that a teacher must carry, and playing the
guitar had taught me that. Each and every student will face different
challenges and I believe that as a teacher, one must have patience to learn
each student’s strengths and weaknesses while possessing the resilience to be
able to identify these strengths and weaknesses and effectively help one’s
students learn and grow.
Hi Caroline,
ReplyDeleteWhat a cool hobby you wrote about. I think an important feature to remember about your experience is what a large role motivation plays in literacy. You excelled more in playing the guitar because you enjoyed it and the learning was self-motivated. This is important to remember to when giving our students tasks and projects; allowing them to have as much authority over the task will produce better results.
Caroline,
ReplyDeleteI didn't know this about you at all! Being able to play and instrument is not only an awesome literacy to have, but it is also a literacy that is very hard to accomplish. I would know. I've tried playing so many instruments, and the only one that I am able to play (and by "play" here I am referring to only being able to play a few songs) is the keyboard. I only WISH I could play the guitar! You may even use the guitar in future teaching lessons? Just a possibility.
Hi Caroline,
ReplyDeleteHere's that group I was trying to recall: BOND!
http://www.bondquartet.com/