Clearly I thought (at the time), I’d be teaching high school social studies or government at the community college level. Turns out, I was made to teach elementary school. {See: Best Part}
Here’s a little interview I did talking about discovering my inner teacher, dining with rock stars and working too much.
Was it scary to change careers?
Absolutely! But the thought of staying where I was scared me even more.
I bridged the money and experience gap through substitute teaching for a year while I was earning my teaching credential. Nothing prepares you for teaching like doing it every day with new kids – not even your credential program.
During that year I learned about classroom management (and how it was the most important part of being able to teach), organization, ages of students I was most interested in teaching, and that yes, I really like kids and wanted to spend my work days with them.
What program/school did you go through to get your credential? Would you recommend the program/school you went through?
I went through the UCDavis/Sac State Collaborative program – an intense 1 year program which has since been dissolved. Both colleges offered challenging courses and helped me develop my teaching philosophy.
UC Davis professors helped me learn how to teach kids to read (and pass the RICA), how to use a read aloud to develop a community of learners, challenge my students with writing in math, use games to further learning as well as teach me some math fundamentals I never learned.
Who knew multiplication was actually just repeated addition?
You did?
Can you say that about your co-workers?
What do you like least about teaching?
Hmmmm… the endless meetings for meeting sake? What about paper work for paper work sake? Everyone and their grandma thinking they know how to do your job better than you because they went to school? The national “debate” how my profession is RUINING THE WORLD AS WE KNOW IT?
Christ, I may have to start a whole other blog for this one. Since I don’t have time for that, please go read Mrs. Mimi at It’s Not All Flowers and Sausages. She says it better than I do anyway.
Stay tuned for Part 2!
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Do you have any questions about becoming a teacher? Do you have anything to add?