On my 16th
birthday, I visited my friend Michael. He received private tutoring after
school and therefore knew some topics in mathematics better than I did. Our
mathematics teacher, Mr. Stavrides, was a brilliant mathematician, but I always
left his classes with many unanswered questions and many issues still unclear.
It was not his fault, though. How could he be expected to be effective with 33
students in a class where the radiators did not work and the ceiling leaked? On
that day, with a little help from my friend I managed to grasp the topics that
I had not understood in Mr. Stavrides’ class. On my way home, I thought about
it. If my parents could afford to send me to private tutoring like Michael, I would
have a chance to achieve my goal of becoming an electrical engineer. It was an
open secret that Mr. Stavrides offered private lessons to groups of three to
five students of his class just after his normal teaching hours in the school.
My family could never have afforded these lessons. Some students said that Mr.
Stavrides could be persuaded to offer a little extra ‘push’ to the grades of
the students of his groups. These grades were of great importance for
university entrance. Everybody in the school knew Mr. Stavrides’ private
students. They knew that we knew. The normal hours in the school and the
private hours in Mr. Stavrides after school ‘lessons’ were interlinked.
However, nobody could do anything about it. I duly took my examinations the
following year, and eagerly awaited the results to see if I would become an
electrical engineer. Sadly, my grades were not adequate. My cold class with the
leaking ceiling and my teachers who secretly and unashamedly taught for money
are among the excuses that I still make today in order to protect my hurt ego.
Yes, I never became an electrical engineer; but it was not my fault. Yes, I
could have become an electrical engineer if I had been able to afford to be
better prepared for the examinations. At that time, I didn’t know the exact
meaning of the phrase ‘equality of educational opportunity’. But I did know the
meaning of the word ‘unfair’. Two decades later, the world is very different.
However – and this is quite disheartening – the Greek school system has not overcome
the problems that I experienced many years ago. hagitegas.gr (Το ιστολόγιο ενός φροντιστή)
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