why teach (revised)

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Keith Chrisman Fall 2013 “Why I Chose to Become an English Teacher” Special Methods of Teaching English 53-526 Professor Clish With All Your Power... What Would You Do?: Why I Aspire to Teach English Wayne Coyne is a weirdo. If there was a certification process necessary to wear the designation, he would be grandmaster of the determining organization. The architectural design of his home has labels for “bath pod” and “fountain egg.” His band has released a 24-hour song on 13 actual human skulls which operate as USB drives. He is the main vocalist for The Flaming Lips, a psychedelic-rock band from Oklahoma. While Wayne Coyne isn’t the leading candidate for many secondary education jobs and it may not even be wise for me to cite him as an influence in an interview, he has undeniably inspired me to pursue a career in education. The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song (With All Your Power)” is not the most palatable song by The Flaming Lips but by asking listeners to question their intentions and consider their level of authority, the song addresses key components of the teaching profession: recognizing the opportunity to stand for something and being conscious of our ability to influence. Coyne poses questions like, “If you could make everybody poor just so you could be rich, would you do it?” and “If you could watch everybody work while you just lay on your back, would you do it?” behind a chorus of “yeahs” (yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah...) before suggesting, “We cannot know ourselves or what we’d really do/With all your power/What would you do?” The tone of the song evokes a sense of humility and an acceptance or understanding of misdirected values... Wayne Coyne doesn’t inject feelings of guilt as much as he strikes an intuitional chord. Just before the

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Page 1: Why Teach (revised)

Keith ChrismanFall 2013

“Why I Chose to Become an English Teacher”Special Methods of Teaching English

53-526Professor Clish

With All Your Power... What Would You Do?:Why I Aspire to Teach English

Wayne Coyne is a weirdo. If there was a certification process necessary to wear

the designation, he would be grandmaster of the determining organization. The

architectural design of his home has labels for “bath pod” and “fountain egg.” His band

has released a 24-hour song on 13 actual human skulls which operate as USB drives.

He is the main vocalist for The Flaming Lips, a psychedelic-rock band from Oklahoma.

While Wayne Coyne isn’t the leading candidate for many secondary education jobs and

it may not even be wise for me to cite him as an influence in an interview, he has

undeniably inspired me to pursue a career in education.

“The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song (With All Your Power)” is not the most palatable song

by The Flaming Lips but by asking listeners to question their intentions and consider

their level of authority, the song addresses key components of the teaching profession:

recognizing the opportunity to stand for something and being conscious of our ability to

influence. Coyne poses questions like, “If you could make everybody poor just so you

could be rich, would you do it?” and “If you could watch everybody work while you just

lay on your back, would you do it?” behind a chorus of “yeahs” (yeah yeah yeah yeah

yeah yeah yeah...) before suggesting, “We cannot know ourselves or what we’d really

do/With all your power/What would you do?” The tone of the song evokes a sense of

humility and an acceptance or understanding of misdirected values... Wayne Coyne

doesn’t inject feelings of guilt as much as he strikes an intuitional chord. Just before the

Page 2: Why Teach (revised)

listener begins to feel guilty, the composition creates an overwhelming feeling of

empowerment as he asks the listener what he/she will do with all of his/her power.

Perhaps this effect is caused by Coyne putting words in the listener’s mouth; he gives

power by asking one to consider what they are doing and will do with theirs.

===

The most recognizable song by The Flaming Lips is “Do You Realize??” I have

heard it licensed for a Range Rover commercial. The Official Rock Song of Oklahoma

is Wayne Coyne’s most accessible attempt at writing a song dedicated to remembering

how precarious our whole existence is. Lyrics are offered as reminders of truths; “Do

you realize we’re floating in space?/Do you realize that happiness makes you cry?/Do

you realize that everyone you know someday will die?” If I try to take one word away

from this song, I end up with “perspective.” Consider what you may not have

considered before. “We are not the experts of our own behavior,” declared my

Anthropology professor on the first day of class. Many times an outsider’s observations

about our behaviors will illuminate things we had never paid attention to. This

phenomenon makes literature exciting for me. Language Arts provides the opportunity

for a person to escape his/her individual wormhole of consciousness and encounter

and/or consider another’s path. Evaluation of a different perspective is easily connected

to the evaluation of one’s own perspective, making the study immediately relevant.

“Do You Realize??” ends on a more positive note than stressing the

impermanence of life. Coyne sings, “...instead of saying all of your goodbyes/Let them

know you realize that life goes fast/It’s hard to make the good things last/You realize the

sun don’t go down/It’s just an illusion caused by the world spinning ‘round.” Wayne

Page 3: Why Teach (revised)

Coyne expresses a perspective. One considers it. In doing so, he/she evaluates his/her

own.

===

Through these two songs, written and performed by a certified weirdo, I identify

my motives for becoming an English teacher. I want to use my position of power to

empower younger generations. By valuing curiosity and promoting exploration, an

instructor can cultivate interests, passion, and confidence in a group of students. I want

to engage in the exploration of different perspectives with a community of learners. I

want to realize encounters with difference and recognize opinions as opinions in the

search for truth. I want to teach to learn.