Recently I had a colleague ask me for some ideas for dealing with challenges when it comes to classroom management, student behaviors, and just keeping up with the responsibilities of teaching in general. I'm always happy to have time to talk with other educators — there is so much to learn by connecting. I think sometimes there is an assumption that because someone may have been teaching for 10 or more years, or worked in the same school district for a long period of time, that's there is a higher level of knowledge and skill held by a teacher that fits into this description. While of course the more that you teach, it might seem like you would have a lot of ideas and answers to share with younger or new to the school teachers, but the longer you have taught also means, I think, that you have that much more to learn.
Having taught for about the last 25 years, I've had a lot of different experiences, some good, some bad, some in between, and some just absolutely fantastic. I have been in the position where I needed to improve, and felt like no matter what I tried to do or could try to do, that I just would not succeed — that I would lose my job. I've also been at the opposite end where I felt like things were going well. I could feel more success and a change in how I had been teaching in the classroom and in my connections and relationships that I had built with the students and colleagues.
I think if you ask any educator, most can probably identify the best year they've had, and if they can't, they just can’t yet. We always have room to grow and things take time. How do educators decide what makes it the best year? For some, is it a year without many challenges, the students are well-behaved, homework is complete, other clerical tasks and responsibilities held by the teacher are finished, observations went very well and teacher ratings are satisfactory or proficient or whatever the ranking may be? Maybe. But how do we truly define what would be the best year ever?
It Takes Time to Build
I am fairly certain that last year was the best year I've had yet. I think because I changed a lot of things in my classroom, I stopped worrying so much about having every minute of every class accounted for and instead gave the students more possibilities to lead in the classroom and for me to have more opportunities to interact with them. Now it did not come without its challenges, some student behaviors that in some cases pushed me so far beyond frustration that I thought I reached my breaking point. I reacted in ways that I was not proud of, and I let the frustration get the best of me. I stopped seeing the student and only saw the behaviors. My “lens” had become clouded and it took some reflection and just not feeling very good about it for me to realize that I had to do something different.
The common feeling or response is when you feel like there is a lot to handle or come up with a plan for, can feel so isolating. You might feel lost or like others are judging you based on what you perceive to be your weak areas when it comes to instruction. And I've had a few people confide in me that they feel like they're too different or too weird or they're not normal enough to be teachers. Hearing those kinds of things breaks my heart because I don't want to see teachers become disengaged or to lose their passion for doing the work that teachers do because of worrying about how others may or may not perceive them.
My response is always it's good to be different — what does normal look like anyway? Does normal mean everybody gets and does the same thing? Does being normal mean you fit into some kind of mold, one that may or may not be who you truly are? I think the best that we can do for our students is to show them who we are because we want to know who they are.
We can't hide behind some perceived idea or model of what a teacher should or should not look like, nor should we compare ourselves to our colleagues or other teachers that we may have had in our own experience. When we do this we lose sight of something and I think it's important for us to demonstrate and model for students. We need to worry about ourselves first and only compete with who we are today by judging it based on who we become tomorrow. Everyone has weaknesses, everybody struggles, everybody feels like they don't belong at times. A friend once wrote about being in the land of misfits...I'm totally fine with that.
What can we do, regardless of what year we are in within our careers? New teachers have a lot to offer us veteran teachers. There are better pre-service teacher programs and more information available to current students that are seeking to get into the profession, than what is available to us veteran teachers, who may not have access to or may not even know they exist. And for the new teachers, when you are assigned to have a mentor in your school, I really don't think you should consider it to be that you are the learner and that you must follow and adhere to all of the advice of your mentor. You have to decide who you want to be, what is your purpose, your why, your spark, your passion for doing what you're doing?
We can get lost and swept up in all of the activities that pull us every single day leaving us very little if anything at all to work with to build our own skills. As veteran teachers, we need to seek out mentors for ourselves as well, and that might mean connecting with a newer teacher to your building or a new teacher to the profession. How can we expect our students to interact and understand different perspectives, and to be accepted if we ourselves do not do the same thing and go beyond that?
It starts with us and it always starts with us to take that first step. We have to be okay with who we are and commit to doing whatever is best for our own personal and professional growth, but being mindful of what that means and how it will impact those we lead and learn with.
So if at any time you feel down, lost or frustrated or like you're becoming disengaged or that you don't fit in, please send me a message. I'd love to talk to you and share some of my own experiences on my 25-year learning journey.
Need to connect? Reach out to me on Twitter @Rdene915 and join in Edumatch!
Rachelle is a longtime French, Spanish and STEAM Teacher and an EdTech Consultant. She is also an attorney and has a Master's Degree in Instructional Technology. She serves as President of the ISTE Teacher Education Network and Communications Chair for the Mobile Learning Network. She received the Presidential Gold Award for Volunteer Service to Education in 2018, was selected as One of "20 to watch" by the NSBA and the PAECT Outstanding Teacher of the Year in 2017, and is a Future Ready Instructional Coach. She is an Edugladiator Core Warrior and an Affiliate of the Pushing Boundaries Consulting LLC.
Teddy Roosevelt once said, “I am a part of everything I have read.” When Rachelle read his quote, it greatly resonated with her because of her love of quotes and the impact they can have in our lives. In Other Words is a book full of inspirational and thought-provoking quotes that have pushed her thinking, inspired her and given her strength when she needed it.