How to Create Better Quality Teachers (For Yourself, Your Organisation and Your Kids)
13 May
I’ve met a lot of teachers over the years who want to get out of teaching. Why?
I’ve also met and worked with lots of people over the years who consider teaching for one reason above all else: because it’s great for the holidays. What? What about the longer working part? And the effect it has on your personal life?
Of course, you’re sending your kids along (or at least you probably will be) to spend much of their time with people who either don’t want to be there, or who only want to be there because they can’t wait until school’s out. (This might ring alarm bells in your own work too). That’s an awful lot of people who don’t really want to be there teaching your kids. I don’t know about you, but it scares me. I don’t want someone helping to grow, develop and teach my children, when their heart isn’t in it. Because when their heart isn’t in it, then their performance, energy and results aren’t in it either. The impact on your child’s learning, results and life, is huge.
For the record, I’ve also met a handful of teachers over the years who are in their ideal career, working not for the holidays, but for their passion and enjoyment for teaching and helping integrate children into the real world. These people are the bridge to accelerating learning. These people are driven to make it work. They really care about their pupils and seem to put the needs of their pupils before their own. And they tend to be remembered by their pupils. You may remember some of yours and you may even have the urge to get hold of them if you could, to thank them. They made impact and they made learning enjoyable and powerful too. A couple of my teachers stood out like that. A couple, out of about 50.
Please note, I don’t blame teachers at all and I’m not having a go at teachers. Because what’s going on here is going on in your field too. My advice to teachers though who don’t really love their work is to get out and find and get into something that really makes you bounce out of bed in the morning and give it everything. Something you’re driven to get better and better at and something that puts you in the best position to really help others doing what you do best. My advice to everyone else (especially if you have kids) is to help teachers you know who are considering a career change to see it through. They might be very pleased to hear of www.thegreatcareerescape.com. Getting in to their ideal career will make them happier more productive people, and it will make way for teachers who were born to teach well. They are out there, possibly working in the wrong job. Think of the number of children’s lives this will positively influence over time.
And while you’re at it, consider how and where this is going on in your own industry too. Perhaps some strategic repositioning will positively change your life and the lives of your customers?
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Hello! I'm Mark Moore and I help employers and employees maximise their value to each other.
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