Such limitations as accompany inadequate salaries,
lack of prospects and absence of professional status
convert teaching into “a dull mechanic art”
and deprive it of its chief elements of enjoyment,
namely the free exercise of personality and the recurring
satisfaction of seeing minds develop under instruction,
so that we are conscious of our part in helping the
future citizens to make the most of their lives.
It is this power of impressing one’s own personality
on the pliable mind of youth which brings at once the
greatest responsibility and the highest reward to the
teacher and attaches to his task a true professional
character since it may not be undertaken fittingly
by any who cherish low aims or despise their work.