This post resonated with me, it was from @TeachThought
- You’ve spent as much (or more) time redesigning assessments than you have “re-teaching.”
- You’ve cried at least twice.
- You know the reading level of every single student, no matter what content area you teach, or how many students you teach.
- Students grow more confident as the year goes on, not less.
- You realized that your Project-Based Learning unit really should’ve probably been a novel study, and your “poetry unit” really should’ve been a self-directed, Challenge-Based Learning unit, and….well, you get the picture.
- You dream in edu-jargon.
- You’ve taught before class, during class, after class, during your lunch, during your planning period, in the hallway, before school, after school, via twitter, across email, and through YouTube.
- You focused more on learning than teaching.
- Your unit and lesson documents have more post-it notes (indicating needs for revision) than original text.
- Speaking of post-it notes, they’re making more than 50% of your books unreadable with clutter.
- Your instructional coach actually quick-walks the other way when they see you.
- You can recall, on demand, more than 75% of your academic standards.
- You text with your principal.
- You’re out of paper, hard drive space, bandwidth, or email storage by December.
- The email address of more than 25 parents “auto-completes” in your email address bar.
- You’ve Google’d “instructional strategies” at least 11 times.
- Your district technology coordinator is intimidated by you.
- You read TeachThought, Edutopia, and Mindshift more than you watch local news, The Bachelor, and Duck Dynasty put together.
- You’ve encouraged your spouse, children, or friend to be “data-driven.”
- Some students don’t like you.
- Your facebook page has more edu-commentary than the YouTube comments section of an Arnie Duncan press conference.
- You have more than 3 legal pads full of meeting notes that seemed important at the time.
- You’ve spoken to the grandparents of certain students more often than your own siblings.
- You’ve “borrowed” someone else’s coffee, tea, or Diet Coke.
- You’ve fallen asleep grading or planning.
- You’ve wanted to fall asleep teaching.
- You’ve noticed a growing suspicion that the “unit” may not be the best way to package curriculum.
- Students seem bothered when you’re disappointed in them/their performance.
- You literally never stop thinking what you could’ve done better.
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