Your post very well points to the state of many (not all - I have met some real gems) 'experienced' teachers' mentality, behaviour and attitude, as follows:revel wrote:...
It seems to me a very responsible task to ask oneself, as an inexperienced teacher, the questions offered, however I think I would have looked for more sources than just one book with a title that promises to help the inexperienced overcome the hurdles that a new job offers. Only experience does such. And the various and sundry replies that make up the "Dave's" part of the "project" are things we experienced teachers already know about and are sometimes tired of sharing with the inexperienced. Nothing I could offer would be useful as it has often been rightly pointed out that what works for me is because it is I who is using those techniques or methods. That is the true work of the teacher who is accumulating experience. This "project" should have been better researched and notated and kept to the OP's self in the notebooks where such things hide for years until we get around to finally throwing them out one fine Spring Cleaning.
My concluding remark might just be "get thee to the library and read all of those books on teaching, teaching ESL, teaching in a foreign land, etc, that are in the stacks. Get the job and convince the students and bosses that you know what you are doing even if you don't." Posting on Dave's is not the same as publishing in "Applied Linguistics Today" (does that scientific journal exist? Were we doctors I might have said "Lancet" or "JAMA", you get my meaning.) Keep notes but keep them to yourself until someone hires you to lead a teacher-training workshop.
Uuff! Am I in a spicy mood today!? Sorry about that, no offense meant and hopefully not taken.
peace,
revel.
- A general awareness of the problems that face inexperienced teachers
- An unrelenting highlighting of the inexperience which the inexperienced is aware of and is making efforts to address
- Constantly vague and contradictory barrages of destructive criticism regarding everything and anything the inexperienced does (relevant and very often not) to become experienced whilst simultaneously beating him/her round the head for not trying hard enough to become more experienced
- This takes place all the while the administrator is aware of it or not, often taking place in a patroninising, insulting, rude, smug and gloating manner
- An inability to empathise or care about much if any of the aboves effect on the individual while all the time boasting about one's own experience and supreme ability which is never really evidenced or shared apart from in the boasting