Alan always hated children. They were noisy, senseless, and completely insufficient. Why anyone would consider them a joy was beyond him. Raising James had taught him little in the ways of parenting, and he felt for the better of it. For, when it came to Alchemy, James' curiosity had merely... lead him along. Not so with these students. He knew students in Hogwarts had been coddled and sheltered. Some assumed that they could skip classes, sleep through them, and party as they pleased. Others believed they knew everything. They breezed through their courses, but what were they truly learning?
Alan berated himself internally for even accepting this position. How foolish he had been to accept the assignment without any careful thought. He had merely heard that Majere had "dropped the ball," and there was an intense paucity in the children's alchemic understanding. He certainly had not accepted the post in the vain hope that he would illicit such dreams of Alchemy in student's minds, but he could at least widen their perspective concerning the highly misunderstood practice.
As Alan had never really liked children, he found it easier to stomach the fact that he was teaching by pretending that they WERE capable of rational thought. He would prefer to engage in constant conversation with the students, making them think and consider the concepts that were practiced in his room. His first and foremost rule had been "Think and think with an Open Mind." This was, of course followed by the rule "Do NOT sleep in class," but Alan wanted to believe that it was unnecessary. He had been told that students had CHOSEN the Alchemy course, and as such, they should be interested in the course... right?
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Alan Wake shifted uncomfortably in his seat. He piercing glare stared down the face of the clock. He longed for his study, his old office back at the ministry. It had been so markedly his, that it could not possibly be distinguished from his peers'. Instead, he now had a classroom, a thing which he had never loathed more than now. Alan Wake hated children, yes, but he hated teenagers even more. ESPECIALLY those in their 6th and 7th years. They were generally the ones who believed that they had achieved the most out of the whole ordeal of "school."
Regardless, Alan knew he would have to teach them Alchemy. Today's class had no real plan. He first needed to know what the students knew. Except James. Alan knew what James knew, and that was sufficient enough to survive his class. But the rest of the class would have varying levels of confidence in Alchemy. In other words, today was a discussion class.
WELCOME to ADVANCED ALCHEMY
With Professor Alan Wake