3 Pillars of Creating Relationships with Students in an Urban Environment
Deonte BridgesDeonte Bridges
Articles by Deonte
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How to be Authentic with Your Students
Published: Jul 19, 2021
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Published: Jul 08, 2021
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The Importance of Patience in the Classroom
Published: Jul 06, 2021
Even as a child, I’ve always had a passion for serving the community. As I navigated through school, especially high school, people started asking me what my plans were and what I was planning to study. At the time, I didn’t have a sense of direction in regard to what I wanted to study.
So I started studying business, but then I transferred schools and realized how much I wanted to stay in the community that raised me. My college didn’t have an education program, but they did offer sociology. I liked learning how systems worked. I learned that Martin Luther King Jr. also earned a degree in sociology. I had a lot of great educators who inspired me to get back into the community I loved.
I now teach at a school in an urban environment. It’s home for me. My high school and college are 10 minutes from the school I teach at now. It’s the community I grew up in, and that makes it even more special and meaningful for me. It’s definitely an urban environment, and it’s one that is plagued by some of those detrimental factors that we often associate with urban environments. But at the same time, it’s full of purpose, promise, and potential. I want to do my part in cultivating that potential and promise I see in my scholars because at one point in time, I was that student. My teachers saw something in me and invested their time, efforts, and resources. I think it’s only right that I do the same thing.
And it all comes down to building relationships with the students. Here are three pillars of creating relationships with students in an urban environment that I take to heart.
Sometimes you have to take your teacher hat off and just be there for them. When you build strong relationships, they try harder. Knowing that you care about them helps solidify relationships, and that’s where the learning starts. You can show up for them in ways that help them see you in a different light and as a role model or a mentor. A student once told me in the middle of a lesson that I was like a father figure to him. That moment gave me confirmation that I was doing the right thing and I was making an impact.
Learn more about taking your teacher hat off here.
So I started studying business, but then I transferred schools and realized how much I wanted to stay in the community that raised me. My college didn’t have an education program, but they did offer sociology. I liked learning how systems worked. I learned that Martin Luther King Jr. also earned a degree in sociology. I had a lot of great educators who inspired me to get back into the community I loved.
I now teach at a school in an urban environment. It’s home for me. My high school and college are 10 minutes from the school I teach at now. It’s the community I grew up in, and that makes it even more special and meaningful for me. It’s definitely an urban environment, and it’s one that is plagued by some of those detrimental factors that we often associate with urban environments. But at the same time, it’s full of purpose, promise, and potential. I want to do my part in cultivating that potential and promise I see in my scholars because at one point in time, I was that student. My teachers saw something in me and invested their time, efforts, and resources. I think it’s only right that I do the same thing.
And it all comes down to building relationships with the students. Here are three pillars of creating relationships with students in an urban environment that I take to heart.
- Be authentic.
- Be patient.
- Take your teacher hat off.
Sometimes you have to take your teacher hat off and just be there for them. When you build strong relationships, they try harder. Knowing that you care about them helps solidify relationships, and that’s where the learning starts. You can show up for them in ways that help them see you in a different light and as a role model or a mentor. A student once told me in the middle of a lesson that I was like a father figure to him. That moment gave me confirmation that I was doing the right thing and I was making an impact.
Learn more about taking your teacher hat off here.