Inside Education 429, Gene Mehigan on The Master by Bryan MacMahon (4-5-24)


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May 04 2024 49 mins   3

Presented and produced by Seán Delaney.


The format of this podcast differs a bit from the usual one in that I am joined by my colleague in Marino Institute of Education, Dr. Gene Mehigan to discuss a book that influenced him on his journey as a teacher and teacher educator. The Book is The Master by Bryan MacMahon, published by Poolbeg Press in 1992. Among the topics we discuss are the following:


  • How a book about teaching in Rural Ireland from the 1930s to the 1970s could speak to a teacher in a DEIS band 1 school in Darndale in the 1980s and 1990s.

  • The consequences of poverty on children in schools.

  • The “stain” of large classes (and their impact on children with language difficulties in particular).

  • The importance of reading

  • How Bryan MacMahon encouraged children to collect words (red notebook) and Gene Mehigan’s variation of it (jar on teacher’s desk).

  • Stages in a reading lesson as outlined by Bryan MacMahon (who noted that they are not rigid and may need modern modification):
    • Arousal of interest (day before)

    • Introduction (before lesson begins to heighten interest in the text)

    • Examination of matter expressed in the text (Comprehension)

    • Examination of matter implied in the text (Comprehension)

    • Write difficult words on blackboard (Tier 1, 2 and 3 words today)

    • Teacher models reading

    • Children read aloud or silently

    • Isolate phrases for composition usage

    • Informed organic chat (in style of everyday conversation)

    • Dramatisation of the text (Reader’s theatre today)

    • Committal to rote “not to be scorned on special occasions”



  • Why a teacher needs to back down in a confrontational situation with a pupil

  • Characteristics of a good teacher;
    • Dedication

    • Sense of humour

    • Clear penetration in the timbre of the teacher’s speaking voice

    • A love of learning

    • Versatility of approach to a lesson

    • A congenial monotony (that can be departed from)

    • Occasional informal language

    • Good blackboard use and being able to sketch

    • Act in harmony with the traditions and culture of the school area



  • Bringing the extraordinary into your teaching.

  • The teacher’s job is to help each child find their special gift.

  • Bryan MacMahon: “I realised that each child had a gift, and that the ‘leading out’ of that gift was the proper goal of teaching. To me a great teacher was simply a great person teaching.”

  • Thoughts on a school library, access to books and encouraging children to read.

  • Trying to entice children to read by tidying books. Buddy reading – to help beginning or reluctant readers but also helping older children consolidate their interest it reading. Helping a teacher narrow down who in a class might have dyslexia

  • How Brian MacMahon practised an early version of “home-school liaison”

  • Contemporary resonances – children from Germany fostered by local families during World War II.

  • How Bryan MacMahon recruited children to look after other children who were vulnerable in some way

  • Resonances with Johathan Haidt’s book The Coddling of the American Mind (preparing the child for the road and not the road for the child).

  • How learning tables enthusiastically helped a pupil later excel as an emigrant

  • “A school is nothing if it is not a place of laughter and song.”

  • Sources of creativity in education

  • The importance of a teacher being a philomath.