The problem with numbers
His Holiness Pope Shenouda III addresses the problem of large numbers of students in the class in the context of service and explains the impact of that on the spiritual and educational quality in Sunday Schools.
Problems resulting from large numbers
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Loss of order inside the class and student disturbance which consumes the teacher’s time and increases his stress.
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Difficulty in managing dialogue and participation; one cannot ask questions and discuss with a large number.
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Weak ability to review and memorize: students leave the schools without remembering the lesson.
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Difficulty tracking absences or knowing students’ names, and loss of individual care.
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Increased noise and shouting that weaken the teacher’s effect and disturb other branches.
Effect of number on spiritual growth
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Large numbers prevent individual work and personal meetings necessary to know the children’s circumstances and solve their problems.
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Teachers saturated with large numbers cannot care for new spiritual growth, and the number may become an obstacle to growth.
Practical solutions and recommendations
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Divide classes when they grow — like the cell dividing — and keep a limited-size class.
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Prepare and train new teachers and organize spaces and schedules.
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Implement teacher-pairing (one teacher for the lesson and another for order and materials) then switch roles to avoid emotional fatigue.
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Ensure class size does not exceed 20–25 pupils as a maximum to preserve effectiveness and care.
Spiritual conclusion
Quantity is good at the branch level but a single class must remain limited so that the service remains true care, purposeful and spiritual, and so that the teacher is humble and influential in the pupils’ souls.
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