World's Greatest Teacher

By Brad Meltzer

The teacher who changed my life didn’t do it by encouraging her students to stand on their desks, like John Keating in Dead Poets
I was good at something.When I met Ms. Shelia Spicer, I was in the ninth grade and had just moved to Florida from Brooklyn. Most of my teachers at Highland Oaks Junior High seemed to look past me; I was one more student among hundreds. Ms. Spicer, however, took a special interest.

“You can write,” she said, explaining that she wanted to move me into the honors English class. But because of scheduling conflicts, transferring wasn’t an option. So instead, Ms. Spicer told me to ignore everything she wrote on the blackboard for the rest of the year. “Ignore the discussions. Ignore the assignments. You’re going to sit here and do the honors work.”

A decade later, when my first novel was published, I went back to Ms. Spicer’s classroom and knocked on the door. “Can I help you?” she asked, trying to place me. I’d had a lot more hair the last time we saw each other. “My name is Brad Meltzer,” I said, handing her a copy of my book. “And I wrote this for you.”

Ms. Spicer began to cry. She’d been considering early retirement, she said, because she felt she wasn’t having enough of an impact on her students.

I didn’t know how to make Ms. Spicer understand what she’d done for me: Thanks to her, I fell in love with Shakespeare. (In fact, she once forced me to read the part of ­Romeo while a girl I had a crush on read Juliet.) I learned how to compose an essay. It was her belief in me that gave me the confidence to become a writer. I owed her.

Thirteen years later, when I heard that she was ­finally ready to retire, you better believe I was at her going-away party. It felt a little like sneaking into the faculty lounge: I wanted to surprise Ms. Spicer, so I tried to blend in. But as I sipped my water and eavesdropped on school gossip, I had a troubling thought: What if Ms. Spicer wasn’t as great as I remembered? I was suddenly terrified that reality might destroy my memory of the woman who had inspired me so deeply. Over­dramatic, I know, but true.

I was hiding in a corner when one of the teachers called everyone’s attention to the presentation of a parting gift—a crystal vase. All Ms. Spicer needed to do was say a few words thanking everyone for coming. Instead, she stood up and delivered a stem-winding speech that began like this:

“For those of you complaining that kids have changed, and that it’s harder to teach these days, you’re getting old. You’re getting lazy. These kids haven’t changed. You have! Do. Not. Give. Up. On. These. Kids!”

When she finished her rallying cry, the crowd burst into applause, and I was ready to apply for a teaching certificate. That was the woman I remembered! I went up to Ms. Spicer and thanked her for changing my life all those years ago. I realized that night that I was still, and would forever be, her student.

Oh, and my crush who read the part of Juliet? I married her. I owe Ms. Spicer for that, too.

Brad Meltzer’s newest thriller, The Fifth Assassin, will be out in January. His nonfiction books Heroes for My Son and Heroes for My Daughter profile remarkable people from Amelia Earhart to Randy Pausch to, of course, Ms. Shelia Spicer.

If you liked this, try Brad’s article about…

My First Lady
Brad married his high school sweetheart. Here’s the true life story as it appeared in Details magazine.

NEW – Brad’s Trip with the USO
For ten days, Brad went with the USO to Kuwait and other undisclosed military locations. Here’s the incredible true story of what happened when he came back and said thanks.

Brad has studied all four presidential assassins from John Wilkes Booth to Lee Harvey Oswald. Here’s what they have in common. Originally published in the New York Daily News.

NEW – How I Taught My Daughter To Fight

Here’s the true story of Brad, his daughter, and the book that was born when she entered his life.

Need More Brad?

Click below to see a full in-depth interview with him talking about his other books, writing in general, and why he always hates his author photos.


I Need More Brad

Connect

Press Inquiries

Staci Schecter

Click here to email

Corporate Speaking Engagements

Brenda Kane

Click here to email

Kirk Myers
Click here to email

The Harry Walker Agency Click here to email

Film Inquiries

Anna DeRoy at WME

Click here to email

Snail Mail

Brad Meltzer

20533 Biscayne Boulevard #371 

Aventura, FL 33180

Back to Top