Teaching, Inspiration, and Rock ‘n Roll
I started teaching at age 27. Though I thought I was old then, I look back now and see that I was most assuredly still a very young adult. Back then I was very much a self-starter. After subbing in a district for 3 months I managed to get hired on a year’s teaching contract with NO credential based purely on my wit and candor and my ability to speak Spanish and English. In California, this is called an “emergency credential” and it’s rarely done nowadays . . . for good reason. I had absolutely no classroom management skills, apart from being a sub which is vastly different from being the only grown-up in charge of 36 ten year olds for 185 days. Those first 3 years were very tough, but I got by on the inspiration of my twenties. It seems like my thirties have required more strategy than instinct to find success.
Now, 10 years later with a full credential and a Master’s degree, I still often find myself at a loss for inspiration. I never give up though. On those days that I am discouraged and unmotivated, I try and get away from the daily routine. I put aside the lessons I had planned (as much as is possible to stay within my responsibilities) and I focus on the things that I truly enjoy: guitar, art, poetry, reading, songwriting, nature, etc. Then I tap into that wonder I have for those things and bridge it to the material I have to teach. For example: if I have to teach reading data on a graph, I make a graph about the different guitars there are.
I adapt my lessons that day to whatever is really giving me personal inspiration at that moment. All people (even small ones) are attracted to a leader or performer who is passionate about what he is doing. Kids want to emulate that energy. I remember going to see REM in concert in my 20’s and being so drawn in to what singer Michael Stipe was doing onstage. I didn’t understand the wierd symbols on the screen or the strange movements he made, like hitting a metal chair with a wooden rod on the off-beats on “World Leader Pretend,” but I tapped into his passion and energy for what he was doing, and when they left the stage I screamed for an encore. It was like a moth to a lightbulb, the lightbulb was passion. The world is so full of boring people. It’s important for leaders, teachers, writers, performers, and artists to share an influence that is NOT boring with this starved-for-passion world.
Discouragement that saps inspiration is the teacher’s biggest enemy. By tapping into and bridging my passions with my students, I am able to get through those tough days when I have to methodically put one foot in front of the other and keep remembering that I got into the profession to make a difference. With a brief look inward, it works every time. Group Project: Source Of Inspiration » Inspiratio...
Popularity: 39%






Oh, I love it! You are so good, I wish I had you for a teacher when I was young. You are running on adrenaline aren’t you! I keep slipping over here to see if you are on your way to the hospital yet. Did you send this on to Inspiration Bit yet?
Thank you so much, Damien for participating in this group project. I too wish there were more teachers like you.
I’ve been teaching for 9 years (Web Design and Programming in colleges), quit it last year to concentrate more on practical development.
My inspiration came from students - seeing that some of them not just understood what I was teaching about but were actually able to produce some outstanding work based on my lectures.
If you could contact me and send me your email address so I could reach you later on with some questions regarding the project, that would be great.
Thanks again, Vivien.
I see you added a blogroll! Thanks for the link. Where’s the twitter thingie? I was going to look and see if you have a baby yet!
You are so welcome. It should get some traffic to your site. What do use for your contact page? I’m searching for a plug in. I’m trying to do some changes to my site to clean it up. I hate a messy house, don’t you?
[I hate it, but I still have one, lol]
Where do you teach? I think I’d like to move there. The world needs more creative teachers like you :)
This is another reason why I am a big, huge, screaming and screeching proponent to keep the arts in our schools. You don’t have to be the musician, designer, writer or painter of the century, but the arts provide an outlet and a creative and positive means of solving problems and life’s little challenges.
Loved your entry!
Jessica The Rock Chick
Thank you for this uplifting entry, Damien. The world definitely needs more passionate and creative teachers like you.
All the best to your wife.
I’ve commented here yesterday, but somehow my comment didn’t show up - perhaps it was flagged as spam?
Great Post. I remember more lessons taught by a teacher that used their own life experiences than the lessons they taught strictly from their textbook.
Keep up the good work.
Hey thanks Joey. I was just tellin’ it how it is! thanks for your comment.
Vivien, I more or less “cast this post on the water” effortlessly. I can’t thank you enough for publishing it to your site. I am learning I write best when I just let the “me” come out. Thanks again.
By now you probably know that I have contacted her at “ibit.” What a wonderful opportunity. Thanks for the referral there.
My son would have responded quite well to a teacher using your methods. I’d attend a class you were teaching in a heartbeat. Passion and energy can pull reluctant students out of disinterest.
You encouraged me. Everybody needs to have consistence in their career development.
May 27th, 2007 at 5:18 am
[...] Teaching, Inspiration, and Rock‘n Roll by Damien Riley Focus on the things that you “truly enjoy: guitar, art, poetry, reading, songwriting, nature” and bridge your passions with others. [...]
May 27th, 2007 at 10:13 am
May 27th, 2007 at 10:13 am
May 27th, 2007 at 9:33 pm
May 28th, 2007 at 6:57 am
[...] Teaching, Inspiration, and Rock‘n Roll by Damien Riley, Riley Central [...]
May 28th, 2007 at 3:03 pm
May 28th, 2007 at 8:02 pm
May 29th, 2007 at 1:37 am
[...] observers, making you wish to bring a tribute to all mothers, even though sometimes they cannot mix Teaching, Inspiration, and Rock‘n Roll, to keep their children happy along the [...]
May 29th, 2007 at 6:36 am
[...] is what riley says in response to vivien’s call for inspiration. I was intrigued by this post because it has [...]
May 31st, 2007 at 12:51 am
[...] Teaching, Inspiration, and Rock‘n Roll by Damien Riley Focus on the things that you “truly enjoy: guitar, art, poetry, reading, songwriting, nature” and bridge your passions with others. [...]
May 31st, 2007 at 6:42 am
May 31st, 2007 at 1:47 pm
[...] Teaching, Inspiration, and Rock‘n Roll by Damien Riley. [...]
Jun 1st, 2007 at 6:17 am
[...] Teaching, Inspiration, and Rock‘n Roll by Damien Riley [...]
Jun 1st, 2007 at 7:35 am
[...] and ended up on the front page with 770+ diggs! I was honored to have my post counted among them: Teaching, Inspiration, and Rock‘n Roll . These are being read all over the web and for good reason, inspiration is a universal need out [...]
Jun 2nd, 2007 at 6:38 pm
Jun 21st, 2007 at 11:55 pm
[...] Teaching, Inspiration, and Rock‘n Roll by Damien Riley Focus on the things that you “truly enjoy: guitar, art, poetry, reading, songwriting, nature” and bridge your passions with others. [...]
Jun 24th, 2007 at 9:00 am
[...] presents Teaching, Inspiration, and Rock ‘n Roll | Riley Central posted at First Edition: Doing What They Love. This article speaks of inspiration as the [...]
Feb 24th, 2008 at 11:21 am
Mar 11th, 2008 at 7:55 pm
Mar 11th, 2008 at 8:32 pm
[...] Postcards From the Funny Farm :: Teaching, Inspiration, and Rock ‘n Roll [...]
Apr 18th, 2008 at 11:17 pm
May 6th, 2008 at 5:40 am
[...] ran across this inspiring photo today at Neurophilosophy, a recent addition to my blogroll. Mo, the author, describes the [...]
May 10th, 2008 at 11:24 pm
[...] along with the bad there is plenty of good I must add. In addition to the minority of students who have tested my desire to remain a teacher, many more [...]
Jun 11th, 2008 at 5:00 pm
Jun 14th, 2008 at 6:55 pm
[...] exciting, others they just browse boring stores looking at beautiful vessel sinks Anyway, the show rocks and here’s some reasons why you should TIVO [...]