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Teacher Tips When
I first starting teaching, I was very nervous but also bursting with enthusiasm. I
wanted my students to get fantastic results, have some fun as they learned, to enjoy the
subject. I would spend hours preparing, assessing, thinking about what I would do
next. But there comes a time when you realise that working smarter is better than
harder and that's what this page is about.
Experienced teachers stumbling
across this page do please share snippets of your experience to reduce the learning curve
and allow that enthusiasm to continue to flourish.
Work smarter not harder, homework
and coursework tips
General Pointers
- Don't live in your catchment area
unless you are able to deal with personal questions like 'Who was that man I saw you with
last night', or 'That's a great selection of pyjamas you have Sir, my Granddad has some
just like that'.
- Be firm but fair
- Mark student's work as soon as
possible - most them are keen to see their results
- Show a personal interest in your
students, phone home occasionally (depending on your school's policy) - it works wonders
- Let students know that you expect
great things and have every confidence in their ability to deliver
- Be generous with praise when it's
deserved
- Never ask an older pupil for a
rubber - only an eraser
Classroom management
advice for new teachers
- A student being a pain and
disrupting a lesson? Send them to a teacher in the farthest, most remote corner of
the school with a note for a 'long stand' or 'an idiot exchange'. They're bound to
read the note on the way and will get the message. In the meantime you can get on
with teaching your class in peace.
- Each teacher has their own style
of dealing with disruptive pupils but I've always found that dealing with them in humorous
ways works best. It's not always possible when you're tired, frazzled and have
deadlines to meet, but think about the methods you have seen in practice and try different
approaches to see what works for you.
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