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Australia's oldest teacher shows no signs of slowing down. on Jul 1, 2012 by SkyNewsAustraliaMore
Australia's oldest teacher shows no signs of slowing down.

on Jul 1, 2012 by SkyNewsAustralia
Irapuato
Australian Fr Geoffrey Schneider SJ, has been declared the world's oldest working teacher, by Guinness World Records, reports the Independent Catholic News.
Father Geoffrey Schneider, who has been teacher and chaplain at Sydney’s St Aloysius’ College's Junior School for 47 years, said he has no intention of retiring, as he approaches his 100th birthday in December.
The secret of his success, he …More
Australian Fr Geoffrey Schneider SJ, has been declared the world's oldest working teacher, by Guinness World Records, reports the Independent Catholic News.
Father Geoffrey Schneider, who has been teacher and chaplain at Sydney’s St Aloysius’ College's Junior School for 47 years, said he has no intention of retiring, as he approaches his 100th birthday in December.
The secret of his success, he said, is “a mountain of patience”. “If things are going wrong, don’t start shouting. Just proceed quietly and things will settle down eventually. Their books will eventually open.”
Fr Schneider has taught at schools in Sydney, Melbourne and Perth, shaping the intellects and values of leading figures of Australian government, business, academia and sport, including Tony Abbott.

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Retirement doesn't appeal to him. Why retire, he said, “So I can read the paper every morning and then forget what’s in it? That’s what a retired friend told me happens to him...At 3pm there’s afternoon tea and if you don’t turn up in the first minute they come knock on your door and say, ‘It’s tea time now’.
“Really, I shouldn’t be frightened of it, but it just doesn’t appeal to me. I just feel I can be more useful here.”
Father Schneider enjoys a fierce popularity at St Aloysius’. In the early 1990s, Year 3 students were asked to name a new building after their favourite Jesuit saint. Innocently, they chose “Saint” Schneider.
“I didn’t worry about it at the time, really, but after that we received a direction that the Jesuits were not to have any buildings named after them while they are alive,” he said.
www.cathnews.com/article.aspx