Anonymous wrote:Unclear if you are interested in promotion opportunities or challenge.
If you’re looking for promotion, you could be a dept chair or admin.
For challenge, each year presents new challenge. I like to switch up the courses I teach, which gives me a chance to refine the lessons since the last time I taught that course. Technology brings new opportunities to improve. If you’re doing it right, teaching is never boring and always challenging
Anonymous wrote:Getting a high school position can be tough sometimes. So, sometimes teachers will start in middle school, build skillset, gain certs, and then transition to high school with a better resume. I have seen this happen quite a bit with elective teachers.
Anonymous wrote:If you are a teacher, is there any type of "moving up"?
Is the job challenging enough to stay in the same position year after year?
Anonymous wrote:The job is extremely challenging. I don’t think it gets easier; I just think you get better at it the more you teach. (I’m in my 20th year.)
I don’t consider administration a promotion since it’s no longer teaching. In order to move up, you have to move out of the classroom.
As admin, your experiences in the classroom stop, whereas teachers continue to progress and get better. Then you end up with what we have now: administrators with less experience evaluating teachers with far more.
It really is a messed up system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The job is extremely challenging. I don’t think it gets easier; I just think you get better at it the more you teach. (I’m in my 20th year.)
I don’t consider administration a promotion since it’s no longer teaching. In order to move up, you have to move out of the classroom.
As admin, your experiences in the classroom stop, whereas teachers continue to progress and get better. Then you end up with what we have now: administrators with less experience evaluating teachers with far more.
It really is a messed up system.
In my experience, a really good admin learns quite a bit from observation of a range of teachers, students, looking at data etc. and can offer helpful feedback. They also often deeply respect the perspectives of experienced teachers. A really bad admin just imposes whatever they did back when they were teaching as the gold standard and gets increasingly defensive about their own teaching skills.
Anonymous wrote:The job is extremely challenging. I don’t think it gets easier; I just think you get better at it the more you teach. (I’m in my 20th year.)
I don’t consider administration a promotion since it’s no longer teaching. In order to move up, you have to move out of the classroom.
As admin, your experiences in the classroom stop, whereas teachers continue to progress and get better. Then you end up with what we have now: administrators with less experience evaluating teachers with far more.
It really is a messed up system.