Sunday, January 25, 2015

Literacy Profile

Over the years, I have become very literate in the sport of tennis.  I first took an interest in tennis when I was nine years old. I had tried playing other sports before, but I could not find one that I really loved.  During September of that year, I was watching the U.S. Open with my parents and I remember being extremely impressed by the competitors.  I decided that I wanted to learn how to play.  Neither of my parents played tennis.  Not really knowing anything about the sport, we bought a small kid size racket from Dick’s Sporting Goods and I signed up to take some lessons at the Rally Point Tennis Club in Smithfield. 
            The instructors there were a large part of why I began to love the sport so much.  Everyone was great to work with and I had a lot of fun going to play every week.  I soon started to sign up for leagues at the club and began playing several times each week year round.  I quickly started learning more from the instructors there.  I began to understand how to properly hit the ball with the different kinds of shots, how to construct points, how to position myself on the court, the rules of the game, and even things like the differences between the many kinds of rackets.  At the club, I began to work with Mike Petrarca who became one of my greatest influences.  He was a junior at Bishop Hendricken High School when I first took lessons from him and was a former New England champion.  He never thought it was too early for me to learn a more advanced shot or strategy and always pushed me to get better.  Unlike some of the instructors who would play a lot easier with the kids, he would play against me to test the very upper limits of my abilities.  Every time I would get better, he would hit harder shots against me and make me run farther to get to the ball.  I worked with him for many years, until I was a senior at Bishop Hendricken playing on the team as he did when I first met him. 
            Tennis is one of the hardest sports to master and remains a complicated one even after playing for years.  I would say that after playing all through middle and high school, I became literate in the sport.  Most of the practices used in tennis revolve around form, rules, and strategy.  All of the shots in tennis have a different form that allows you to hit the ball powerfully and accurately while keeping it within the boundaries.  For example, a literate tennis player will know the difference between a topspin forehand and a slice forehand, how to execute both of the shots, and what situations they should be used in.  The topspin forehand is a more aggressive shot used while the player is in control of the point.  This means that this player is deciding the pace of play.  To hit a topspin forehand, the player will take his racket back and down low with the face of the racket angled towards the ground.  When the ball is slightly out in front of him, he will swing forward from low to high finishing the swing over his other shoulder.  This technique generates the forward spin on the ball that causes it to accelerate after it bounces on the other side of the court.  The slice forehand is a more defensive or strategic shot and is used to slow down play giving the player time to recover and return the point to a neutral standing.  To hit a slice forehand the player will take his racket back in the same plane of the ball with the racket face angled towards the sky.  When the ball is just out in front of him, he will swing forward horizontally pushing through the ball and finishing the shot out in front of his other shoulder.  This is used to put a varying degree of backwards spin on the ball which when used correctly can cause the ball to bounce very low and slide across the court or cause it to lose all its speed after bouncing.  There are so many more literacies even within each shot that it takes a long time to learn and begin to master them all. 
After high school I finally truly knew the strategies for singles and doubles play, how to hit all the different shots, and had started gaining a wide knowledge of all the equipment involved in the sport.  It was also at this time that I decided that I wanted to take a break from playing competitively and start teaching tennis myself.  I worked as a tennis instructor for the four years I was in college.  I worked with people of all ages, from very young children to teenagers to adults and seniors.  I often look back on my experiences as a tennis instructor as I am preparing to be a teacher.  I learned how to work with a wide variety of people all coming from different backgrounds, having different skill levels, and having different strengths and weaknesses.  As an instructor, I always pushed the players I was working with as much as I could just like I was.  I have a strong belief that people only get better when they are playing someone better than them.  It is this challenge that allows for growth and this is a practice that will be my main focus as an educator.  Pushing a student to his limits, no matter how great or little, is what will make him succeed and be more confident as an individual. 

            The greatest lessons that I have learned from playing tennis are that progress and growth takes time, how to think and react to situations very quickly, and that there is always something new to learn.  No one just magically becomes a good tennis player over night or even over the course of a few months.  If I wanted to get better at a certain type of shot, I would hit that shot hundreds of times over and over again.   Even as I mastered the techniques, an entirely new challenge is thrown in when I have to adapt to what my opponent is doing. I must decide which of my practiced shots I will use, where I am going to move to, and where I am going to hit the ball to all during the amount of time it takes a tennis ball to travel 78 feet at 80 miles per hour.  This also happens to be my favorite part about the sport.  Even after playing for 14 years there are still new situations I find myself in all the time.  Each of these provides me an opportunity to learn something new about my own strengths and weakness, my strategies, and my progress as an athlete.  I can transition these attitudes the classroom by using each day to learn something new about my students and myself as a teacher and then improve my practices to meet the needs of my students.

6 comments:

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  3. Hi Bryan,

    Great template and really enjoyed reading your two posts. A while back I had a great teacher tell me that she thought the best math teacher was the one who had struggled through the material themselves. At the time I thought of a math teacher I had had who I would suggest was still struggling through the material (!) so I disagreed. Now I understand better what that great teacher meant and see how it applies to more than just math. But I wonder what you think: do you believe if you haven't 'struggled' through math (or tennis) you won't be as good a teacher as someone else who has?

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  4. I'm not sure that not struggling through any math classes would make someone a less effective teacher than someone who never did. But as someone who has struggled through math classes and is prone to making silly arithmetic errors on exams, I think it makes me more empathetic with the students. I had an extremely tough time with the real analysis courses I had to take and I'm glad I did. I've already been in situations where students say something like "Well you know everything in math" and when I can tell them that I've had math courses I've struggled in too it kind of helps them believe they can succeed.

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  5. Hi Bryan,

    Thanks for sharing your experience while learning to play tennis. Something that really stood out to me right from the beginning of your story is that of creating a comforting environment to learn in. This includes being an inviting teacher as well as creating a community of enthusiastic students who work together as a team. That was a good reminder to think about how much it affects the motivation and actual learning of the students.

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  6. Hi Bryan, I can relate a lot to your response about your progression with tennis. With sailing I had great instructors who inspired me to get even more involved with the sport and a few years later I turned around and tried to fill their shoes. I think what's especially important about what youve written here is what you say about being pushed. I think a lot of times teachers will try to take this easier on their kids because they want them to get good grades but the end result is that they dont develop skills and knowledge as well. A lot of times, too, the easy teacher is the one that everyone likes while the strict or difficult teacher, the kind that really teaches you, is the one no one wants to take classes with because it is a lot of work.

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