糖心动漫vlog

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Teaching Profession CTQ Collaboratory

Fall Back in Love With Teaching

By Cindi Rigsbee 鈥 February 03, 2015 4 min read
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I love love.

For many years, I tried to recreate the enchantment I experienced with Valentine鈥檚 Day as a young girl by offering a 鈥淟ove In鈥 for my students on February 14. I created 鈥渓ove stations鈥 that students rotated through to find different tasks. At one stop, they found compound-word hearts: a basket full of cut hearts, each labeled with one half of a compound word, serving as a fun puzzle. At another, students had to read a love poem from a stack of poetry books. 鈥淲rite a love poem鈥 was the task at a different table, and my favorite, , would serve as the example. But before all that, students had to listen to a love song so they would be in a 鈥渓ove-ly鈥 mood.

For the most part, my middle school students were willing participants (though they were more excited about the candy-gram deliveries that day). It was a day when even students with minor disagreements with one another took a day off to be nice.

But then it ended. I鈥檓 not sure exactly what year I had to cancel the 鈥淟ove In.鈥 At some point, I realized that I needed that time to teach specifically to my standards, answer my principal鈥檚 daily question 鈥淗ow will this get results?,鈥 and search for more rigorous work.

But still I believe, deep inside my Valentine-shaped heart, that teachers can find love in a school building. Here鈥檚 four ways how.

Start With the Students

Let鈥檚 face it鈥攖eaching is difficult. Teachers hit the floor running early in the morning and are still rocking and rolling long after the dismissal bell rings. I always tell struggling teachers鈥攅specially those beginning their careers鈥攖hat when they feel that exhaustion (which sometimes turns into disillusionment), they should focus on what matters most: the kids.

Look for the ways that are making a difference in your classroom. If is 鈥淲e are a family in this classroom, and this is a safe place for all of us,鈥 and your students know it, then there will be many instances when those learning moments are obvious. Concentrate on those moments when a student 鈥済ets it鈥 or when a student鈥檚 witty comment results in contagious laughter, and realize that you鈥檙e making a difference in the life of a child.

Continue the Love With Your Colleagues

There is certainly love to be found in friendship, and the best jobs are the ones where you get to work with your friends. From planning lessons together to data-diving into assessment results, if you stand side-by-side with your colleagues, your job site will be a place that gets you excited to go to work in the morning.

Look around during your faculty meetings. There鈥檚 often a feeling of 鈥淲e鈥檙e in this together,鈥 or, on some days, 鈥淲e survived this together.鈥 Try to cultivate that bond by supporting colleagues during meetings and reaching out to help in small ways during the day.

Make an effort to see your colleagues outside of school, too. Knowing the teacher in the classroom next door on a personal level means you鈥檒l have some support during the day-to-day trials. And it鈥檚 always nice to have a true friend nearby when you need a sounding board (or when the copy machine jams).

Love Yourself, Too

Like they tell you on airplanes鈥斺淧ut the oxygen mask on yourself before helping others鈥濃攖eachers must take care of themselves first. I once talked to my daughter, a psychologist, about how to help a struggling teacher who was leaving the school building crying every day. She said she would start by asking the teacher two questions: 鈥淲hat are you eating?鈥 and 鈥淗ow much are you sleeping?鈥 Teachers must meet their own needs before they can address the needs of 30 or so squirming bodies in a classroom.

After those 鈥渓ower level鈥 needs are met, there are other ways that teachers should love themselves. Finding interests outside of school is one way to balance all that work stress with fun. My former mentee Jenny worked hard and played hard in her first few years of teaching. Her stories of rock climbing and horseback riding inspired me to take a community dance class for my own benefit.

Figure out what hobbies you鈥檙e interested in, set aside your schoolwork for a night or a weekend, and do it!

Love the Profession

Being proud of what you do is important, too. Avoid toxic, negative conversations about teaching and remain positive and solutions-oriented. If others don鈥檛 know the amazing things that are happening in your school building, tell them to come look! A day in a school watching the magic, learning, and love may change those naysayers鈥 minds.

Choosing this profession most likely started for you as a tiny seed of love: for children, for a subject area, or for social justice. Make sure that love continues to grow, even if there are difficult days. You鈥檒l always have the honor of making a difference in someone鈥檚 life.

And I love that about teaching.

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