teacher
All about teachers and the world of teaching; teachers sharing their best and worst interactions with students, best teaching practices, the path to becoming a teacher, and more.
Best Support and Opportunities for all
American youth currently face challenging realities along their way to adulthood. With parents working longer hours and the absence of grandparents and other community adults who used to make up support systems, the intergenerational fabric of community has been frayed. Youth development strategies aim to reweave community fabric in a new way - one that takes the supports and opportunities young people should have, and re-institutes them in the context of young people's realities today. While many of these realities are harsh ones, we know that young people themselves want to be involved in their communities. The importance of building positive youth/adult partnerships in this process cannot be stressed enough.
By Megan Wilson5 years ago in Education
Making Community
As an educator and crafter, the project I love doing with my students most is paper roller coasters. What can you make with a ream of cardstock, a pair of scissors and some tape? We can make a ride for some unsuspecting marble that defies gravity, demonstrates the majesty of force and motion, and traverses time and space. And it all begins with an idea.
By Lori Stahl-Van Brackle5 years ago in Education
Adventures in Teaching
Adventures in Teaching: David and his Desk Our routine is well established at this point, the kids enter my classroom and grab their writing journal. They find their assigned seat and begin working on the writing prompt that is on the front board while I take attendance.
By Lorenza Bucine5 years ago in Education
Teachers Who Make A Difference: The Gift That Lasts A Lifetime!
Some forty years ago, I learned that the Battle of Hastings was fought in 1066. I have to admit that I've never been called upon to use that information, any more than I've been called upon to recite the various classical columns in traditional architecture. There's not a big demand, I guess.
By Robert Bacal5 years ago in Education
My Favourite Teacher
The teacher is the leader of the whole nation. It plays an important role in building a professional community. He removes the umbra of ignorance from many works in his action, according to the need of his audience. Everyone has something important inside of them. A skilled teacher finds a treasure trapped inside each student. Certainly the teacher's lifestyle is not highly respected, and he has no pride and enthusiasm within himself. They all respect him.
By Sumesh Bhaila5 years ago in Education
The Circus Of Life
I felt transported…out of my 'row house, wrong side of the tracks' neighborhood and into a world I had never seen before, never knew was possible…completely and utterly out of my life and into that of “Charlie’s Aunt” …a play at Heinz Hall in Pittsburgh. One of the girls from the ‘right side of the tracks’ invited me. Her gramma lived at the retirement home where I went with my momma when she volunteered to do hair and nails.…I would sing for them….they would clap and fuss (and put a few coins in my pocket, kinda like Vocal, but not virtual :)…I was hooked.
By Trisha Simmons5 years ago in Education
Aspiring teachers worried over making Ph.D mandatory for teaching on varsities level
No aspirant will be considered eligible for the post of assistant professor in universities without Ph D from July 2021. It may be noted that currently, a candidate who has qualified any eligibility test or Ph D is eligible to get assistant professor’s jobs in universities and affiliated senior colleges across the country.
By Rohit kumar5 years ago in Education
Dirt and Sunshine
I grew up in a home of seven, nestled in the rolling hills and cornfields of the American northeast. While other girls played Barbies and dress-up, I found myself outside in a creek, scooping clay out of a bank. A nerdy, freckled girl with big glasses, covered in dirt and sunshine, I found my passion. To others, it was mud. To me, it was endless possibilities.
By Kirsten Whittaker5 years ago in Education
A Passion for Breaking Down Barriers
You are only able to read this because you understand English. Perhaps, like me, you were born into an English-speaking family and grew up surrounded by your mother tongue. You think in English. And perhaps also, like me, you have largely taken for granted your natural, easy ability to speak what has become the most economically important and useful language of our time around the world.
By Tina Winchester5 years ago in Education
Adlerian
Finally, the conclusion to my graduate paper 'Adlerian Counseling', and I bet you readers are probably glad to see the end. I hope you have learned a little on how to be an Adlerian counselor or even social worker. I am thinking of writing a few more counseling theory articles and I hope we can all learn from them.
By Mark Graham5 years ago in Education







