Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Top 50 Tips for New (and Returning!) Teachers


Here are just a few from the So You Want To Teach? Blog… Many refer to personal growth and/or reflection of one's teaching. Just as students need to think about and focus on their learning, we need to do the same with our teaching! Here's the list (with bold accents for emphasis from me!):


  1. Persevere  
  2. Learn from the wisdom of others
  3. Avoid gossip
  4. Work diligently
  5. Leave room for a personal life
  6. Live on less than you earn
  7. Students are a reflection of their parents
  8. Students are a reflection of their teacher
  9. Persistent problems are usually caused by something you are doing/allowing/omitting/forgetting
  10. Find a core group of other young teachers and learn together
  11. Mistakes happen; admit when you are wrong
  12. Parents often know about problems before class is over; students text crazy fast and subtly
  13. If a parent complaint is going to hit an administrator's desk, make sure they are prepared beforehand
  14. Take "mental health" days off from time-to-time as necessary
  15. Don't try to understand why kids do what they do, try to planhow you will respond
  16. We're all making it up as we go
  17. Don't take anything personally
  18. Love your students
  19. Don't let anyone walk all over you
  20. Smile more (read You Better Smile Before Christmas!)
  21. Plan your lessons, but don't tie yourself to your lesson plan
  22. Fire drills happen
  23. Bus tires don't always stay inflated
  24. Bus wrecks sometimes happen too
  25. Before you yell at kids for not staying focused, think back to how your acted during your last inservice
  26. Don't argue with anyone in front of anyone else
  27. Choose your battles (I used to have kids call home about chewing gum, now I simply have them spit it out)
  28. Practice THE LOOK (authoritative, but not condescending)
  29. Study your body language
  30. Shut your mouth more often
  31. Strive to eliminate these words: Umm, uh
  32. Minimize the use of these words: Like, cool, well
  33. Ending your directives at a lower pitch level will greatly increase student compliance
  34. Audio record 20-45 minutes of teaching a week (however much you can bear to listen to); find one area to fix and write it down in a journal
  35. Write that same focus area on a post-it note and keep it with you whenever you are teaching
  36. When you listen to the recording the next week, figure out if the problem got better; if not, address it again
  37. If a problem persists for three weeks in a row, move on to another problem and come back to this one later
  38. This same process works with your students too; if they are having a particular problem, address it three times, then move on and come back to it later
  39. Go observe other teachers as much as you can
  40. Find at least one mentor
  41. Create a Culture of Encouragement rather than a Fortress of Fear
  42. Remember that your students are real multidimensional people
  43. Teenage girls are crazy; Teenage boys occasionally have brains and use them even less often
  44. Respect comes when people feel safe
  45. Be as consistent as you possibly can be
  46. If you must be inconsistent, make every effort to at least be fair
  47. Make someone's day every day
  48. Say "thank you" more
  49. The secretaries run the school/district; treat them accordingly
  50. Don't seek out special recognition

Monday, September 17, 2012

Too Busy for Online Courses?


Life is too short for... (learning things you may not be in the mood for)


Something to consider as more schools (K-12 through university and graduate school) offer online courses. If anyone gets a quote, please leave the amount/description below in comments.


http://www.wetakeyourclass.com/faq.html



Too bad ALL of our students can't say this... "Give us a deadline and we will meet it!"