I did a summer program for the last two summers and some of my fellow teachers from there are in their last year of college. They (and others) keep asking me how real teaching is, so I wanted to get some thoughts down.
Yes, being in charge of 150 ish kids is absolutely bananas, especially when you add in the English Language Learners, the 504s, the IEPs, and the BIPs. If I total up all of that paperwork, I have about 35 kiddos who need extra help in some form or fashion. That is unreal for a first year at my school. HOWEVER, THIS IS STILL SO MUCH BETTER THAN BEING A LONG TERM SUB. A few of those kids I had last year made me want to never go near a classroom again. What a world of difference starting the year out with your very own kids makes! Thank goodness I kept pursuing my lifelong dream.
So, yes, the whole staying organized/slightly ahead of your kids business is challenging. But I have yet to feel like I'm totally drowning or simply surviving. We had a training day this past Saturday and almost every other teacher looked EXHAUSTED and kept mentioning how they were happy to just be surviving. Meanwhile, I am LOVING every minute of training, professional learning, meetings, teaching, tutoring, grading, etc. Well, except the emails from parents. But you can't win 'em all.
Funny story about juggling all these kids: I said "Hello, [name]!" to a girl entering my room last Friday and she got the biggest smile on her face and exclaimed "I love it when teachers learn my name and say hello!" Like, it's week two. That should just be a thing. I'm glad I made her day, though. They know I'm trying and when I have a bajillion girls who look exactly alike, I do pause from time to time. But I know them. And I'm learning stuff about them. And they LOVE that. Like, I am 100% committed to attending the freshman football game this Thursday because otherwise I'll have a riot on my hands since I didn't go last week. And I bought a coupon book from one of my choir kiddos and he thought that was the neatest thing ever. THESE KIDS, Y'ALL.
So, friends worrying about the ever nearing future, despite being hired two weeks before school started, I am lovin' it oh so much. I am doing exactly what I was born to do and that is an incredible feeling.
P.S. Once I'm totally settled (haha yeah right, that's a never ending process), I will have some sort of blogging schedule. I really am going to prove secondary education can be cute and awesome. I got lots of stuff to share :)
An attempt at making secondary social studies education cute, challenging, and compelling.
Showing posts with label secondary education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label secondary education. Show all posts
Monday, September 10, 2012
Sunday, September 2, 2012
My First Week Ever (!) In Review (Of Sorts)
Real talk. I was absolutely dreading my first week as a real life teacher. I had a long-term sub position in the spring and it was AWFUL. We're talking I wanted to quit every time I got to my 8th period class. I loved my other classes, but that 8th period almost made me stop teaching altogether. And I've wanted to teach since kindergarten. HOWEVER. This week was the best first week I could have had. Absolutely none of my little darlings are like some of the kiddos I had last year. Sure, there is a lot to balance between two preps, 150 ish students, and a whole mess of paperwork. But y'all, my classes are fun. No crazy behavior issues yet and most of them are willing and ready to participate. What a breath of fresh air.
I'm still getting my room in order and all organized and cute. I am on a mission to prove that it's not just the elementary classrooms that are all cutesy and fun. My goal with this blog is focus mostly on social studies plans, but also discuss classroom and behavior management ideas that can work for high school and middle school, all while being goofy and adorable. Let's see how this goes. I'll leave you with a picture of how my room looked on the eve of classes starting:
I'm still getting my room in order and all organized and cute. I am on a mission to prove that it's not just the elementary classrooms that are all cutesy and fun. My goal with this blog is focus mostly on social studies plans, but also discuss classroom and behavior management ideas that can work for high school and middle school, all while being goofy and adorable. Let's see how this goes. I'll leave you with a picture of how my room looked on the eve of classes starting:
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)