Secondary school teachers have hitherto played a pivotal role in moulding and shaping students life both morally, academically and spiritually. In four years spent in secondary school(that's if you were more bright to repeat any class) many realise what they need in life.
Teacher's impact on those four years stands outstandingly and nostalgia creeps in once you finish secondary education.
Ranging from varying personalities, beliefs and approaches the following is list of secondary school teachers we have encountered and whose memories remain engraved in our minds:
1.Motivational speakers
Your one-digit figure marks in Maths and Chemistry will attract 5 hours motivational speech from him/her. With well-collected citations from Ben Carson's Think Big to biblical references. These teachers rekindled a fighting spirit in you, by the time they finish the talk your love towards the subject re-awakens and magically you become a chemistry nerd and you end up transmuting the 0.5 marks in chemistry to a 3-digit figure marks.
These teachers often offered parental guidance to students and some coupled up as CU patrons, they see potential where none sees.
They hold special places in student's heart, many remember these teachers with nostalgia with, "If it was not Mr/Mrs ... I would have been doomed" sorts of remarks.
2.Prophets of doom
These teachers will tempt you to tell your local church pastor that the most talked about prophets of doom in the bible are at your school.
They will spend most of their lessons predicting doom for low performers and sunshine for top performers.Your almost non-existing English phrases will attract a one-hour prophecy with Hallelujah remarks from sadists within the class. But why though???
He/she will prophesy the far your grade will take you is Sensei Institute of Technology where the only qualification has hitherto remained to be a national identity card.
Low performers tends to dearly hate these types of teachers but when they make a breakthrough in life their memories pops up with, " I wish Mr/Mrs knew what I am today".
What are other types of secondary school teachers do you often miss?