The first
day of school looms ahead – and you find yourself biting your nails. It does
not matter if you are a veteran teacher who has taught for thirty years or
more, or a recent graduate from a
teaching college facing your first class as a solo teacher. It’s just normal to
get a bit of “stage fright” as the first day of school rolls around.
Is it anticipation, nerves or just
plain fear?
As teachers,
we all have good reasons to examine our feelings and emotions when faced with
the challenges of the year of teaching ahead. It takes a great deal of energy
to be a teacher. It requires high levels of commitment, responsibility,
knowledge, and leadership skills to handle a class and to guide and engage
students in learning. How you feel about your work affects its quality and the
degree of pleasure you take in it.
Being
willing to be shut inside a classroom with a large group of children actually
takes real courage. As teachers, we are less free than business people to take
breaks, go out to lunch on the spur of the moment, or to walk away from our
responsibilities. While we may not work 9 – 5, many of us actually devote all
our waking hours to our classroom concerns. Teaching requires some real sacrifices
– and each time we start a new year, it may be wise to look at how well we have
balanced our “real lives’ outside the classroom with the rewards we receive
from teaching.
As school
starts, there are always the unknowns – will our class contain “mischief makers”
or “sweethearts?” Will the class size be larger or smaller than previous years?
Will the classroom facilities foster learning? Will you have all of the tools
you need to be effective? Will the larger context of the school environment
contribute to the success of the class?
Outside Factors
You will be
dealing with the school environment and many social factors as well. Will you
be able to “get along” with all the people you will encounter – your own
students, other students in the school, other teachers, the administrators, and
the parents and others in the community?
You will be
juggling schedules, objectives, materials, regular classwork, homework, grades
and much more. Will you have the organizational skills, patience, and energy to
keep up with it all? Having the energy to ‘do it all’ becomes a real question
for many teachers. The rate of “burnout” in the teaching profession is high.
Make a point of looking at how well you take care of yourself. You will want to
build in pleasures, relaxation, and refreshment of various kinds to help you
continue to enjoy and be effective in your work.
As a
teacher, you function as much more than a “learning resource.” You are an
active member of a larger community. You will be engaged in the social context,
both outside and inside the classroom. Influences that shape your class come
from many directions – from people with a variety of personalities, as well as
from the specific facilities and the particular “atmosphere” of your school.
People will
look to you to be a model citizen. Parents entrust their children to you care.
The future lives of your students can depend on how well you have been able to
engage them in learning. Your students may see you as a model to emulate. If,
in any aspect of your life, you feel the need to improve to live up to those
expectations, then this is the time to work on making positive changes. How you
live your life – both inside and outside the classroom – makes a difference to
your students.
Be Prepared!
As the Boy
Scout motto teachers, your best protection is preparation. Of course, you
cannot prepare for every eventuality but you can prepare sufficiently to feel
confident that you can handle most of your important work as a teacher.
I wish for
teachers everywhere a most successful school year and to take care and be safe!
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