Did Amy always want to be a teacher? No. She did a degree in Fine Art with Art History and thought about going into museum and gallery education. But after university she volunteered in a school, the teaching bug bit, the classroom beckoned, and 6 years later she is still teaching and absolutely loving every minute of it ... well almost every minute.
In this podcast we talk about ...
How training to teach was a baptism of fire but so enjoyable.
The cyclical nature of schools means each year is highly...
Did Amy always want to be a teacher? No. She did a degree in Fine Art with Art History and thought about going into museum and gallery education. But after university she volunteered in a school, the teaching bug bit, the classroom beckoned, and 6 years later she is still teaching and absolutely loving every minute of it ... well almost every minute.
In this podcast we talk about ...
- How training to teach was a baptism of fire but so enjoyable.
- The cyclical nature of schools means each year is highly motivating as there is always a new challenge.
- Why finding a school that matches your personality enables you to be the teacher you want to be.
- Setting up your classroom at the start of the year and getting the tables in just the right places is not easy!
- Winging it isn't a bad thing, it shows that you have developed into a confident, knowledgeable teacher and it is a key component of reducing workload as you become more experienced.
- What do you do when the hamster has escaped! Should I tell the Headteacher?
- The importance of coping with feelings of being overwhelmed not just accepting them as part of the job.
- How much credibility you gain with the children when you let a tarantula crawl on your head!
- Why creative chaos is not really chaos at all but essential for productive learning.
- The value of learning alongside the children when working in areas where they may have more knowledge than you, such as using certain Apps in computing.
- Realising every teacher has insecurities even if they don't show them and how essential it is to discuss yours with someone you trust who works in a school setting.
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