In her work as a civil rights activist, she collaborated with Martin Luther King Jr. She became the first Black woman to have a screenplay produced with the 1972 movie Georgia, Georgia. Angelou also enjoyed a career as a Tony- and Emmy-nominated actor and singer in plays, musicals, and onscreen.
Some of her famous poems include “Phenomenal Woman,” “Still I Rise,” and “On the Pulse of Morning,” which she recited at President Bill Clinton’s inauguration in 1993 and which earned her a Grammy Award. Her 1969 memoir, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, made literary history as the first nonfiction bestseller by a Black woman. This requires constant vigilance and plain old hard work–and I love every minute of it all!įinally, a quote that appeals to the English teacher in me (and a topic that I’ve written about in a previous post): “Any book that helps a child to form a habit of reading, to make reading one of his deep and continuing needs, is good for him.” It is my fervent hope that the reformers who make education policy will eventually involve teachers in the process and realize that we are killing children’s love of learning-especially in the area of literacy.A multitalented writer and performer, Maya Angelou is best known for her work as an author and poet. I want to enrich their minds and their hearts in the brief time we have together in our classroom. Because I do care about both the information and the child, I refuse to teach by rote and threat or even promise. After 20+ years, I am still learning of new ideas to implement and refining my practice because I want to do right by my students. Although I am confident in my level of expertise, I am not complacent. Moreover, teaching is both science and art and it takes years to feel on top of your game. To be effective requires more effort than I would have thought possible as a young, idealistic undergraduate. Your responsibility is to care about what you’re saying to them, to care about what they’re getting from what you’re saying.” Teaching is not only a calling, it’s an incredibly tough job. And it’s not a responsibility to teach them by rote and by threat and even by promise.
And once you realize that, you have a responsibility to the young people. I know that I have the power to uplift or destroy and I want to be sure to use my powers for good.Īngelou encouraged teachers to “Teach because it’s your calling. Angelou’s best known quotes and one I remind myself of often. “I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel,” is perhaps one of Ms.
Whenever a student I taught a decade or more ago seeks me out to thank me, to share happy news, to ask for advice, or to inquire about my well-being, I am reminded of the impact a teacher can have in a child’s life. Below, I explore some of her words about education that inspire, challenge, and motivate me.Īngelou has said that the influence of teachers is greater than “the most broad, the most wide, the deepest, the most profound influence you can imagine.” I take this responsibility seriously. I hope to be the kind of teacher she has encouraged us to be. I, too, would like to be known as these things to my friends, family, and students. In my mind she was a phenomenal woman who lived up to the standard she set for herself in the quote above. Though we never met, she was a presence in my life through her words. The news of her passing hit me unexpectedly hard. “I would like to be known as an intelligent woman, a courageous woman, a loving woman, a woman who teaches by being.” ~ Maya Angelou