Lessons from Dr. Kaplan: Showing Up and Doing the Work
Timothy Chester reflects on the impactful lessons learned from Dr. Kaplan during a seminar at Texas A&M. This episode explores the values of preparation, presence, and care in teaching and leadership.
This show was created with Jellypod, the AI Podcast Studio. Create your own podcast with Jellypod today.
Get StartedIs this your podcast and want to remove this banner? Click here.
Chapter 1
Introduction
Timothy Chester
It was the second week of Dr. Kaplan’s seminar, mid-morning, one of those sparse conference rooms in the old Academic Building at Texas A and M—this was nearly 30 years ago. Everyone else filtered in just before start time, but I always got there early to take the seat to his right. That day, I found Dr. Kaplan already there, suit and tie on, perfectly in place, rereading an article he’d assigned us, marking it up as if he hadn’t already read it a hundred times.
Timothy Chester
He smiled and said, “I’m glad you’re early. It means you’re ready to wrestle with the material.” No performance or posturing. Just a quiet invitation to do the work well.
Timothy Chester
That moment stayed with me. It wasn’t just about preparation; it was about presence. In today’s Dispatch, we share lessons from Dr. Kaplan and two other professors whose example shapes how I teach and lead others: show up early, take the work seriously, and treat people with care.
Timothy Chester
...That’s what they modeled. ...It’s how I try to live.
