5 best teaching techniques from your Greek school teacher

·

The majority of us second, third or fourth-gen Greeks remember the arduous, after-school Greek school days.

While the rest of your classmates spent their Friday afternoons by the pool slurping a Zooper Dooper, you were waiting around for Kiria Maria to slowly start her journey from the carpark to the classrooms.

Greek school was a complete parallel universe to that of our day classes, even though some us were even taught in the exact same classroom.

It’s pretty fair to say that the Greek school teacher code of conduct, drastically differed from the laws our Australian teachers were trained under. Though, this is precisely what made these years so special.

Here’s the 5 greatest teaching techniques from Greek school:

1. Insults

Kiria Maria introduced us to true savagery before we could even appreciate it.

Didn’t do your homework? “Garbage collector…”

Got an answer wrong? “How do you sleep at night…”

In all fairness, if your Greek school teacher’s straight up roasting didn’t motivate you to learn Greek, at least you picked up some quality Greek insults.

2. Favouritism

Heaven help you if you had the same Greek school teacher as your older siblings or cousins, because if your parents didn’t make it clear who their favourite child was, then Kiria Maria sure would.

While a teacher having a favourite student in an Australian classroom would land them in a heap of trouble, our Greek school teachers were way too honest to pretend they didn’t have a favourite student. Nor did they try very hard to hide it.

3. Physical punishment

Now we don’t want to get anyone arrested, but if your Greek school teacher was around in the “cane days” of the 70s and 80s, she saw no issue with a bit of hard punishment.

Weapons you don’t carry around a Greek school teacher? Rulers, textbooks…or any general stationary required in a teaching environment.

4. Impatience

While our Australian teachers often had a larger number of kids to deal with in class, they somehow always managed to remain calm, even if a child just couldn’t get it.

That calmness didn’t really translate in ‘Greek School Teaching 101’, but I bet you still recall that word you were struggling to remember when Kiria Maria told you off.

5. Emotion and passion

At Greek school, your teachers knew who you were better than you did, and probably had your family tree memorised further than even your parents.

They were able to teach us lessons about ourselves and our cultural backgrounds that shaped who we are today as Greek-Australians. The reason our Greek school teachers were able to be so vibrant, elaborate and transparent, was because they saw us like their own children. They had a true passion for Greek language and traditions, and they believed in continuing this legacy through us.

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Advertisement

Latest News

Everything Greeks abroad must know about registering land in Greece by November 30

Tension is mounting among the Greek diaspora in Australia as the final deadline of November 30 looms to register property.

Historical novel ‘Bound to Two Homelands’ launched in Melbourne and Canberra

Associate Professor Con Aroney's historical novel 'Bound to Two Homelands' launched in Melbourne and Canberra.

Giannis Antetokounmpo co-produces film set on Mykonos island

The Greek basketball superstar, already known for his ventures in energy drinks, wineries, is now adding cinema to his business repertoire.

Mystery of the 300 million euro home listed for sale near the Acropolis

A single-family home on Dionysiou Aeropagitou street, directly across from the Acropolis had been listed setting a new record.

The Economist predicts return of Parthenon Marbles to Greece by 2025

The long-standing dispute over the Parthenon sculptures, also known as thee Elgin Marbles, may see significant progress.

You May Also Like

Australian MP for Veterans’ Affairs marks 80 years since Allied campaigns in Greece and Crete

Today marks 80 years since German forces invaded Greece along the Greek-Bulgarian border on April 6, 1941.

‘Shaped a nation’: Peter Dutton MP sends message to mark OXI Day

Australia’s Leader of the Opposition, Peter Dutton MP, has sent a message to The Greek Herald honouring the 82nd OXI Day.

THI Australia rewards $100,000 grant to Doctors of the World Greece

The grant will help staff the Open Polyclinic in Athens so they can continue providing free medical care for vulnerable communities.