|
You can do it!!!! It's always hard through about mid October. It's a breeze through Christmas Break. You come back refreshed from the Holidays and power through the next eight weeks or so then it's time for Spring Break. When you get back from a wonderfully relaxing Spring Break, it's all downhill!
Think about those excited little faces. The hilarious personalities. The parents who drive you insane but provide the best material for horror stories! Think about the wonderful controlled chaos of the classroom! Try to ignore the administration as much as you can (without risking your job, of course) and focus on your little classroom haven. Once you get in the classroom with the kids, I'll bet all that energy will come right back to you! Their excitement can be contagious! Wishing you a great class, tolerable parents, and a great year! |
| I was in your situation a few years ago and I have to say that I ended up changing careers. I still work with families and young children, but not in a public or private school setting. I am so much less stressed, happier, and earn a better salary. Good luck to you in whatever you decide to do. You have to take care of yourself, too. You have given a lot these past several years and deserve a change, if that is what you want to do. |
|
For me this time of the year is the perfect moment for optimism. Many jobs don't have this opportunity for "starting again" and it really helps me.
I have not been in the "I need to save them all" category of teachers for a long time. Instead, I take small victories and really allow them to help strengthen me when I'm feeling that I'm burning out. DH is also a great resource for me as he helps direct my attention back to that great email I got from an appreciative family or the story I told him about how a girl who had been crying in my office has turned things around for herself. I don't need everything to make me feel like the best teacher ever, but I do try to use them to keep my spirits up in times when I'm overly frustrated by administration or paper work, etc. |
|
Definitely set budget limits.
Go home when you can. Treat yourself DAILY. Repeat what works. Change what doesn't. Don't be afraid to find a few lazy go-tos and give yourself a break once or twice a week. I have a sneaking suspicion you're at my school. Do you have 3s or 4s? |
Did you miss the "fellow teachers" part of the subject line? As an educator, I have to say that the most difficult part of teaching is always unreasonable parents. Thank goodness for the really great parents that make up for the super annoying crowd. Have a great day tomorrow, OP. Why don't you get a quote from each kid in response to a question about what they hope will happen in your classroom, something they want to tell about themselves, something that happened over the summer, etc. Post it where parents can see it at pickup. I am sure you'll have cute, funny, silly responses. |
Do you mean you're?
|
Yeah, and it should be kid's. |
Surprise surprise most teachers feel this way |
| Don't wear yourself out. If your contract time is from 8-3, for example, then be at work at 8 and the leave promptly at three. |
Not a teacher and ita |
| OP, could you do (have you done) anything through Donor's Choice? It would give other people -- including parents of the kids in your class -- a chance to pitch in financially, and knowing they're willing to could really boost your morale. |
|
Here is a link to an excerpt from Dave Egger's book "Teachers have it Easy", a must read for teachers and parents:
http://genprogress.org/voices/2005/05/05/14121/teachers-have-it-easy/ |
This is a sweet post. I'm not a teacher, but I think you teachers work super hard and often don't get enough credit. Good luck!! |
|
Teaching sucks, but teaching sucks a lot less than everything else. You are not closely supervised. Most of the kids like you and some of them adore you. You're not getting rich, but most jobs really do pay less. Something funny happens every day. Whether its about students, parents, or coworkers you always have amusing stories to tell. People may not be deferential to teachers as they were in decades past, but teachers are still respected members of the community.
Compared to most other jobs - it's still a pretty good gig. |
| So OP, How did it go? |