5 Steps to Surviving Teaching: 5 Steps, #2
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About this ebook
Teaching is awesome …
And tougher than it looks.
The first year of teaching will likely be the roughest one of your career, but every year has its own unique challenges. Whether you’re about to embark upon the epic journey or speeding toward burnout, I hope you can find something inspirational within these pages.
Inside, you’ll find …
•5 steps to surviving teaching
•Tips and tricks for staying sane and saving time
•Commentary on common teaching myths
•Questions to ask yourself before quitting
•How I improved my parent communication
Bonus: Get 7+ fun and easy-to-run chemistry and biology projects
Julie C. Gilbert
Julie C. Gilbert is a high school chemistry teacher and a big fan of Star Wars, audiobooks, tea, long walks, and thousand-piece puzzles. She writes in several genres, including sci-fi, fantasy, mystery, thriller, and nonfiction. If you’d like to know more, please visit JulieCGilbert.com.
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Book preview
5 Steps to Surviving Teaching - Julie C. Gilbert
Introduction:
––––––––
Dear Teacher or Teacher-to-Be:
You may be wondering ...
Who is this book for?
Whether you’re in a teaching program, in the midst of your first year, or well on your way to burnout, I hope you can draw inspiration from this book. I am a science teacher, so it will have a lot of information applicable to lab portions of the class that might not apply to everybody. Still, I hope it’s useful to you.
What is this book and what is it not?
What follows will be a collection of my thoughts and reflections on the teaching profession. Some people may frown upon the lack of statistics and hard research. Over the years, I’ve become slightly disenchanted with the teaching fads and buzz words. This will be a down-in-the-trenches sort of first-hand look at education in suburban America, specifically in my home state of New Jersey.
A friend recently gave me a rundown on public education in England. While the specifics of the system may differ, people are still people, so the take-away lessons should still be applicable regardless of where in the world you teach.
It is not a textbook, nor is it solely a how-to manual, though I will share some tips and tricks I’ve learned over the years. Since it’s based on my personal experiences, it doesn’t address teaching in an urban or rural setting or in a boarding school.
Who the heck are you and why are you writing about teaching?
I’m a writer, and I’m a teacher. After more than a decade writing and almost a decade teaching, I figured I might as well stop fighting the inevitable and just write a book about my teaching experiences. I’ve been meaning to write a book about teaching for a few years, but lacked the time, content, and collective drive to just sit down and do it. But I seem to be on a nonfiction kick right now. Strike while the iron’s hot and so forth. I’m interested to see where it goes because the book that would have been written a few years ago is definitely not the same one that will be formed now, and if I wait another few months or years, the story will change again.
More specifically, I’m a high school chemistry teacher, but I’ve also done a year of biology and taught fifth grade science. I’ve also taught in both public and private school settings.
How is this book laid out?
First up, you’ll hear a bit more about me so you understand where I’m coming from. Next, I’ll comment on some myths and misconceptions about the teaching profession. That should be fun. Then, I’ll dive into the heart of what you need to survive as a teacher. That part might encompass quite a few chapters. If you really want to get to the save me, I’m drowning
part, go to chapter five. Finally, I’ll lay out some questions and comments to help you decide if you’re all-in or in over your head.
Legal Boringness:
For legal reasons, I will only generally reference students or former colleagues. I will also change the names as necessary. This isn’t about targeting anybody. It’s about pointing out some of the things I’ve learned along my rather varied teaching career.
5 Steps to Mastering the First Year:
Step 1: Gain good perspective and define why you do what you do
Step 2: Plan at least two to three weeks ahead
Step 3: Manage your me time
Step 4: Pick your battles and press on
Step 5: Communicate with parents, students, and colleagues regularly
Bonus: Do what you love, love what you do
5 Steps to Mastering the First Year (the annotated version...)
Step 1: Gain good perspective and define why you do what you do
Why did you become a teacher? Or why do you want to become a teacher? What do you seek to gain from the profession? If you just want to pay your bills, there are probably easier ways of doing so. If you want to make a difference in young people’s lives, that’s great and noble, but it’s not enough on its own. If you simply love the subject you teach, that’s awesome too, but again, alone it’s not enough to justify all the junk you’re going to encounter in the career.
You don’t have to write down eight goals you’d like to accomplish in the next ten years, but it’s not a completely rubbish idea to know who you are, where you came from, and where you’re going.
The second half of this step might sound mystical, but it’s not. Sticking with teaching’s going to have you writing a whole heap of objectives throughout your career, you might as well add a few more to your list. What makes you uniquely qualified to teach these students for 40-minutes to an hour most days of the year for nine months?
Step 2: Plan at least two to three weeks ahead
I actually don’t recommend going too much further ahead than two to three weeks, but there are always exceptions. Some of my colleagues go four to six weeks ahead and that works for them. I’ve found that things change. Short notice assemblies have a way of randomly taking out part of your classes. That’s right. Part. Assemblies rarely last the whole day and often go by grade level, so you could find yourself missing half of first period one day and half of third period on a different day. Occasionally, you get a lot of notice on an assembly, but then, by the time it rolls around, you’ve forgotten about it and need to make adjustments anyway.
Flexibility. I’m not a fan of the word or what it stands for, but it’s necessary.
Staying two weeks ahead gives you some leeway when unexpected things pop up in your life. I’ve observed