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Spend my day with freshman. I also teach at a very small, rural school. I have 3 classes. My largest has 23. Cost of living is low here (but still more than it should be). I have great, supportive admin. The teachers in my hall have a great relationship and great pride in our hall and school. I know I’ve got it a lot better than many teachers ...
I’m good with kids and I’m really passionate about teaching but I hear so many stories about burn out ESPECIALLY from k-6 teachers, so I want to keep my options open. My favorite teachers were my AP teachers in high school, so if I switch to high school I’d definitely be interested in getting an AP certificate post graduates degree.
When I was student teaching I observed other teachers and subjects during every prep period. Lastly, these is a great, GREAT teaching "hack." The Three P's. It is super common in learning a new language so you'll see ELL teachers do it. Present, Practice, Produce. So: the teacher presents something new.
Teachers share their struggles, frustrations and plans amid the latest COVID wave in the US. Some express resignation ideation, others seek alternative careers or locations, and some hope for change and support.
Whether you are a teacher or a student, this subreddit is for you to ask those burning questions of a teacher. Keep it school appropriate, of course. That said, this is NOT a subreddit for surveys or the like.
A place to share ideas, discuss new initiatives, or simply let off steam after a tough week. REMINDER: safeguarding is our number one priority as teachers. So: no names, no pack drill, particularly not of pupils. Avoid mentioning specific schools and locations. And BE KIND. Reddit tends to be a more constructive place than Twitter and less icky than Facebook. So apply all your teacherly ...
Join the r/Teachers community to share your experiences, opinions, and challenges as a teacher. See posts about admin, pay, workload, summer break, and more.
r/TexasTeachers: This is a place for kindergarten, elementary, and secondary school teachers at both public and private Texas schools.
In my tenth year of teaching mostly freshmen and I s2g ever since the pandemic (and honestly like 5 years before that) there’s always a new “thing” students bring to school that they learned over the summer from the internet or wherever.
So much so that 8% of teachers quit per year, which is alarmingly high, but even worse is that 4 in 10 new teachers quit within the first year. Yikes. Yikes. Now there's many reasons for that, but a lot of it (my opinion) comes from ignorance to the profession.