Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ditto the coming home completely spent, and starting at the beginning salary no matter your past experience.
Coming from a creative office environment to teaching, I’m blown away by the number of people who can’t write a professional sounding email to save their lives, and those who reply all to 250 people. The people who lack the work-skills like, such as making a user friendly spreadsheet/ document and basic clear communication. I’ve been here over 10 years and it still bugs me. I have some very smart coworkers who are good at what they do, but have absolutely no patience for those who don’t.
Especially coming from project management, I’m assuming you are used to knowing how to organize and communicate information efficiently- and teaching will be…different.
+1. I am a career changer to teaching (from fed project management) and I have been blown away by how unprofessional other teachers are. They communicate so poorly, it is really mind boggling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have strong interpersonal skills? Are you adept at thinking on your feet? Do you have gravitas? Can you command a room with your presence? Does bullsh*t roll off your back?
If you answered “no” to any of the above, then you will probably not be effective in today’s teaching environment.
I’m a teacher and you’re being ridiculous. Just stop it.
Anonymous wrote:Do you have strong interpersonal skills? Are you adept at thinking on your feet? Do you have gravitas? Can you command a room with your presence? Does bullsh*t roll off your back?
If you answered “no” to any of the above, then you will probably not be effective in today’s teaching environment.
Anonymous wrote:Tutoring dyslexic children.
https://www.asdec.org/certification
Anonymous wrote:Do you have strong interpersonal skills? Are you adept at thinking on your feet? Do you have gravitas? Can you command a room with your presence? Does bullsh*t roll off your back?
If you answered “no” to any of the above, then you will probably not be effective in today’s teaching environment.
Anonymous wrote:Ditto the coming home completely spent, and starting at the beginning salary no matter your past experience.
Coming from a creative office environment to teaching, I’m blown away by the number of people who can’t write a professional sounding email to save their lives, and those who reply all to 250 people. The people who lack the work-skills like, such as making a user friendly spreadsheet/ document and basic clear communication. I’ve been here over 10 years and it still bugs me. I have some very smart coworkers who are good at what they do, but have absolutely no patience for those who don’t.
Especially coming from project management, I’m assuming you are used to knowing how to organize and communicate information efficiently- and teaching will be…different.