For Nigerian math teacher Michael Thompson, who has a physical disability that requires him to use crutches, educating the students he encounters every year in Nigeria is his most important goal. So when he arrived to teach at one particular school where the students wanted to mock his disability, he changed up his perspective and teaching methods—and not only helped them learn math but helped them to be better people as well.
He shared his story on social media, where he’s gone viral for his valuable message about making sure that the students are the most important part of his day.
“The first time I entered the class, they said and I heard it clearly, ‘How can this guy with crutches be our Mathematics Teacher.’ It hurt me,” he wrote.
He went on to explain that the students all mocked him when he went to write his name on the board, because with his crutches he couldn’t even reach the top. “They nicknamed me ‘CRUTCHES,’ Crutches not even ‘Mr. Crutches,’” he said.
But as he went on to write, he decided not to try directly changing the students—but instead changed his perspective so the students didn’t notice how he was making them fall in love with him.
“But you know what I did? I changed my #perspective, I played along with the mockings. I told them each time ‘see my hand cannot reach the top of the board, I will start from where my hand can reach’ ... and I respond with a blooming smile each time they call me ‘CRUTCHES,’” he wrote.
In time, he wrote, the students stopped looking down on him. And not only did they grow to love the subject he teaches, but they grew to love having him at the head of their classroom, as well.
“With time ... they not only love me, they fell deeply in love with Mathematics,” he wrote. “Focus on things you can control and not on things you cannot control or change. Channel your energy wisely.”
The responses to the thread were full of other teachers praising him for his strength and passion for helping children—and they even contained one from one of his own former students.
“I walk with the aid of crutches but that will not stop my dreams of impacting lives and imparting knowledge into people throughout the world,” he said.