Do you read to your class….do you read to your class every day or do you read to your class at all?
Do you read to your class….do you read to your class every day or do you read to your class at all?
If you have never done so, then try giving your class a general knowledge quiz – no not with curriculum questions, rather with questions regarding the world about them.
I was in a school the other day and as I walked about I noticed a teacher sticking photographs into a very nice art ring bound book. The photographs were a record of some practical art that the class had done and were accompanied by brief descriptions of what was happening.
In this final article I am going to try to pull all our thoughts together on the subject of work/life balance. We all know of the dangers of this being out of line and the effects it can have on not only our teaching but more importantly our home lives.
In the previous article we looked at the vital importance of maintaining a work/life balance and the detrimental effects when this does not exist.
Isn’t that a relaxing picture to start the article and don’t you wish you were on that beach !
There is a lot of concern at the moment with regard to the drop out rate in new teachers – currently running at between 40 – 50% in the first 2 years. This is an alarming statistic…not only from an actual staffing point of view but from an economic standpoint of money invested.
Its a question that I am getting asked more and more and to be honest its causing a problem…..not for me but for teachers. So why is this and what’s causing it?
Its a simple enough fact that all lessons should have a start and an end….except when I go to watch some teachers “in action” it is difficult to spot when either or even both of these happen!!
Schools have closed for the Christmas break – the nativity has been performed, Christmas gifts made in art lessons for parents and grandparents and the carol service went without a hitch.