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Is Teaching Hard Work?

Is Teaching Hard Work?

Kevin Bibo

Teaching is hard work and those of us who teach work very hard indeed. Sometimes the work is in the planning, sometimes in the instruction, sometimes in the guidance of students, and sometimes the work is in figuring out what works best for us as teachers working with our students in our classrooms. The beauty of this last type of work is that the answers are not universal, and what works for me may or may not work for you. As you read through my essays remember that what I write is for ME. If you can take something positive away from my working process, great. If not, maybe even better. I believe that each individual teacher needs to figure out what works best for them, and then do it.

I know what kind of a teacher I am and where my strengths and weaknesses lie. I reflect on my teaching. I don’t need to be critiqued, reviewed, or judged by anyone else. In fact it’s embarrassing when administrators walk into my classroom, stay for five minutes to observe as I am working with students, and then leave me a “report” concerning how well I am doing. Please. My point is that teacher reflection is up to the teacher and you are your own best critic. If you feel that you are not being effective in the classroom then it’s time for YOU to start working harder to achieve your goal. If you are failing large numbers of students each semester then YOU need to figure out how to reach them better. If students are sleeping in your classroom during a lesson then its time for YOU to jazz it up a bit. A good place to start improving is research on the web reading about what works for other teachers, reading books about teaching written by teachers, and experimenting with different strategies in your own classrooms.

I find it interesting that the articles I have written that include “easy steps” or begin with “How to…” in their titles get more traffic and comments while other articles focused on the deeper meanings and motivations of teaching get less. Nothing can replace working out your own classroom issues on your own. No book, website, conference, or class can give you experience; and experience is the superior teacher. It’s equally true that some are born teachers, some made to teach, and others have no place in the classroom influencing children. I have no idea what category you as a teacher may fall into here, but you do. I have discovered that I’m no mechanic so I no longer tinker with my automobile. I won’t even change my own oil anymore. I take my truck (of course I drive a truck) to a professional and long-time friend. I know enough to know that I don’t have the talent or the aptitude to work on engines and such. The idea of me working in an automobile repair shop is as absurd as my dear mechanic friend stepping into the classroom to teach. Unfortunately, many people who are not teachers believe that they do possess the skill sets required by the classroom.


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  • Photo_user_blank_big

    rnleftwich

    3 months ago

    8 comments

    This is good advice; all teachers, new and old, should continue to learn while teaching. Motivation is needed in schools.

  • Jyznew_max50

    jyzferia21

    3 months ago

    254 comments

    really a hardwork...

  • 109_max50

    Katie2955

    3 months ago

    50 comments

    good to read

  • Picture_037_max50

    c_gempz

    4 months ago

    412 comments

    I agree!

  • Oct0708_max50

    sanmccarron

    4 months ago

    858 comments

    GOOD teaching is hard work. Self reflection is, to me, imperative to learning from my students and improving my teaching. I've had the administrator come through for half a period and leave a report, but usually the comments are out of whack with the lesson because I have never completely "taught" a topic in one period! I do, however, appreciate input from others. I check in with my students, with my aides, and with teachers in nearby classrooms. One of my favorite things about teaching is all the learning I need to do. When I become one of those "overhead lectures and worksheets" teachers, it will be time to leave.

  • 247b-1_max50

    johnslat

    4 months ago

    1442 comments

    Oh, I forgot - is teaching hard work. Well, yes and no. It certainly requires a lot of time and effort to do it well, but, on the other hand, can doing something you enjoy so much (and even get paid to do) really be considered "work?"

  • 247b-1_max50

    johnslat

    4 months ago

    1442 comments

    I guess I'm what could be called a "veteran" teacher, but I don't consider myself to be a "master", and I'm pretty sure I never will, not if the meaning of "to master" is "to gain a thorough understanding of."
    I see teaching ability and a knowledge of the subject matter being taught as inexhaustible areas that I'll always be learning more about. Rather than a master, I consider myself to be a perpetual apprentice, and I know that there will always be other teachers and students that I can learn so much from.
    In fact, that's one of the things that makes teaching so much fun - you're always learning.


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