Can you be dreaming, imagining, thinking, ponderingAnd reflecting all in a few minutes?



Bird Droppings June 21, 2026
Can you be dreaming, imagining, thinking, pondering
And reflecting all in a few minutes?

I drove to southeast Georgia nearly twenty years ago to take my oral exams for my doctorate. This was a face-to-face follow-up with my committee of professors and, in turn, responding to my three written questions, which were answered in a minimum of fifteen-page papers; my total was closer to eighty or so. I always enjoyed the drive down, often finding my way on back roads. I have several stops I traditionally make. One is a Georgia-native plant nursery, and the other is the world’s best barbecue, bar none, Fresh Air in Jackson.

I got to Statesboro, Georgia, at about seven o’clock on a Friday evening and had forgotten about a graduate conference on Thursday and Friday. Hence, several of my friends from my doctoral cohort were in town, and I had dinner with one of them that evening. I returned to my room to review my answers further and slept a little, anticipating my oral exam the following day. Much of my discussion with my professors was optimistic and enjoyable, as we all have similar views on education. While waiting, I talked with another doctoral student who was there for the conference, and we discussed the right and left wings of education, which have been heavy on my mind recently.

I am far too often on the balance beam’s extreme left, and being loud and often obnoxious can sway the beam. Participating in the Foxfire teacher courses in Mountain City on the Foxfire property, I often found myself outside discussions. So many are locked into a supposed teacher ideal that has been the norm for a hundred years. In talking with others over the past few days, I found that my success and lack thereof were based on whether I was following a specific curriculum rather than on how well the students were doing in school. I had been in an odd teaching role for 10 years in a resource room all day, and then for 6 years in co-teaching. I never had more than seven students in resource; all were often emotionally and behaviorally disturbed and required significantly more attention. In shifting to co-teaching, the demographics are all phases of special education, and a large population of at-risk students seems to end up in co-teaching classes. After retiring from that situation, I spent two years of co-teaching Biology in another county and retired during COVID. I got bored again and went back to elementary school, working part-time for two years.  

Just before I retired for the first time, I was evaluated by an administrator who saw education for the first time in many years, which is very similar to how I see education. Special education is anything but black and white; it has numerous shades of gray and is often multicolored. All of my evaluations during those couple of years were excellent. As I compiled data on what students had done with teachers and classes, especially sitting here and pondering the remarks and statements of teachers involved in the past training programs up in the mountains, I wanted to find commonality among good teachers. What makes a specific classroom work? How is it that one teacher does well without just teaching to test? What combination of attitude, ideas, and skills creates a workable scenario for learning? Perhaps the most critical aspect is this significant learning that will be carried away.

Over the past years, in Atlanta’s leading paper, numerous administrators and teachers in multiple counties faced criminal charges for altering standardized test scores as the ongoing testing scandal unfolded. In the scoring process, they found numerous erasures and corrections disproportionate to those in state and normal testing. Also, the schools questioned raised their scores by nearly 50 points above average. These administrators and teachers face termination because their schools have tested below required levels for the fourth year. No Child Left Behind is what we are told is the name of the bill that mandates all of this testing and curriculum. I use the word curriculum very loosely.

In education, we are in a vacuum regarding school success. Is it genuinely test scores on standardized tests that, here in Georgia, have been controversial from day one? Recently, in the first administration, no one passed a particular math test. How can a specific grade test over a given grade subject curriculum be so hard that no one passes? How can a test at the end of a subject session measure what students have learned without a reference point? I started thinking in math somewhere that someone either made a test from a different book or never really looked at the book they were testing about.

As I talk with and gather information from the former students and teachers of Foxfire, and now new teachers are learning about this idea for my dissertation, I have had the pleasure of communicating with students who have been in the program for nearly forty years and even fifty years ago as well as some in the program at Rabun High School now. Interestingly, they still have fond memories of those classes and are using that knowledge today. Somewhat different from cramming for a standardized test, “teaching to the test,” which all teachers hate, is the norm nationwide in many schools. In my most recent reading, many great educators talked about lifelong learning and said this is what we should be teaching. Sadly, many teachers have gotten away from this.


Sitting with other educators who shared my ideas of learning and education was refreshing in my exam ten years ago. I passed the exam, and now, I am finishing my dissertation over the next few days. I may have gotten carried away in my ranting today, but how we each measure success is crucial to who we are as humans. It could be the mountain air I am looking forward to is getting to me, or maybe my brain works better at higher altitudes.

“You only have to be a little bit better than most in what you do. A little smarter, steadier, just a little more energetic, or whatever other prime quality is demanded in your field. If successes admitted this, they would not have cause to feel so conceited; and if the aspirants recognized this, they would not have cause to feel so left behind at the starting line.” Sydney J. Harris

“Success is just a little more effort,” from his column, Strictly Speaking, it is not that difficult to be a little better than most, but we often see that as too much effort and too much work.

“The person who tries to live alone will not succeed as a human being. His heart withers if it does not answer another heart. His mind shrinks away if he hears only the echoes of his thoughts and finds no other inspiration.” Pearl S. Buck

We need others to succeed, move ahead, and provide support for us as we journey. Success often requires the effort of a group and an individual. I tend to find myself alone, often out of choice, and my monasticism is coming out. But for me, alone time reflects what has happened during a given day.

“To laugh often and much; to win the respect of intelligent people and the affection of children; to earn the appreciation of honest critics and endure the betrayal of false friends; to appreciate beauty; to find the best in others; to leave the world a bit better, whether by a healthy child, a garden patch or a redeemed social condition; to know even one life has breathed easier because you have lived. This is to have succeeded.” Ralph Waldo Emerson

I have heard this quote many times in commencement speeches and motivational lectures on success, yet a little more of it sinks in each time. Perhaps Emerson was ahead of his time. As I read his words, the last line stands out as a significant success in making another’s life easier. A compelling statement in our selfish society is that it is not that we have done that following a prescribed method.

“It is only as we develop others that we permanently succeed.” Harvey S. Firestone

Success is how we leave others as we walk away; the difference we make is the extent to which we change the environment and, in some instances, our ability to accomplish something without making the change.

“My definition of success is total self-acceptance. We can obtain all of the material possessions we desire quite easily. However, attempting to change our deepest thoughts and learning to love ourselves is a monumental challenge. We may achieve success in our business lives, but it never quite means as much if we do not feel good inside. Once we feel good about ourselves inside, we can genuinely lend ourselves to others.” Franklin Covey

Seeing ourselves honestly and learning to like and love ourselves is crucial to success. Success is about us and how we affect the world and others. Success can be a minute difference in what is happening around us. Success can be as simple as elevating a friend or attaining a goal. Success is effort, yet success can be attained with the heart and the body.

“Success is not the key to happiness. Happiness is the key to success. If you love what you are doing, you will be successful.” Albert Schweitzer

As I read quotes and articles this morning to write, it was interesting to see how various people defined success. In many situations, wealthy people defined success in terms of wealth, while others saw the word as a gauge of human involvement. There are numerous different approaches, and comparisons were available as I looked. Was it accomplishment, outcome, achievement, or something else? These were all listed as definitive words for success as I read and think back to two of the quotes I used today.


Dr. Schweitzer spoke of happiness as the key. This man was a musician extraordinaire; he played in concert halls all over Europe and used the funds to run a hospital in Africa from the 1930s until his death many years later. His success in life was his practice of medicine where he was needed. Emerson, as he indicates, says that success is the difference you make in another’s life. As I look closer at myself, I truly believe success is a word that needs others to define your impact and the difference you make. Still, I cannot help but feel successful when contacted by a parent who reports that their child has passed all of his classes for the first time in their life, or, even better for me, that their child was not sent home from school for the first time in eleven years. That makes me feel successful. Success is measured less by volume than by quality. Quality, according to the guru of quality, Phillip J. Crosby, exceeds the customer’s expectations. To draw a simple parallel, success exceeds what someone else expects from you. Please keep all in harm’s way in your thoughts and always give thanks, Namaste.

My family and friends, I do not say this lightly,

Mitakuye Oyasin

(We are all related)

docbird


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