Why some dedicated teachers call it a day
Copied and pasted this from Jialin's email... in case u guys didn't bother to read. Yep. Our dearest Mrs Toh wrote in the ST forum!! About teaching.. and her grievances. Yeah. She's not teaching anymore.. sadz... OK.. so this is it.
The Straits Times 17 March
Why some dedicated teachers call it a day
FOR a long time, my husband and I have kept our grievances as teachers to dinners with our colleagues.
It is difficult to share our woes and sorrows with non-teachers, who assume that we have long holidays, short working hours and a fat pay cheque. It just does not appear to those outside our circle that our job is anything but that.
Having left teaching after five years of service, I think it is time to set the record straight. It is true that a handful of teachers do get away with doing very little work. These are the ones who skive and squirm their way out of any responsibility bestowed upon them. In every profession, there is bound to be black sheep and teaching is no exception. The truth is, for the rest of us, teaching is a lot of hard work and heartache.
Planning lessons that are engaging, effective and still 'cover' the syllabus is challenging for a 35-period week with three or four classes a day. Research needs to be done, resources compiled, notes and worksheets prepared and printed.
The actual lesson itself is more draining than the preparation. Teachers are always on 'high alert' in the classroom - discipline problems to handle (ranging from not doing homework to defiance, stealing and, in very rare cases, fighting); rapport to build, which is ongoing (students are not going to learn if they all hate us!).
Having to handle different sets of 40 or more students in a day's work -where we need to punish and reward, scold and joke with, teach and ensure learning takes place, enforce rules and impart moral values, rein in the egoistic students and give the shy ones confidence - is a daunting task.
Every comment we make may affect a student's self-esteem, desire to learn, willingness to cooperate with us, goals and ambitions for the future. The truth is we would never know the impact of our reprimands or words of encouragement.
Beyond the classroom, there are still the CCAs, department and committee work that demand our time and energy to plan, coordinate, implement and monitor.
School programmes and events like camps and concerts are essential to the holistic development of our students but these add on to our already very heavy workload, which is teaching itself. Parents are a whole new category of problems for teachers. Most are supportive but a few problematic ones can cause a lot of pain for us. Some expect teachers to be on call 24/7; others threaten and abuse us when they do not get their way. Some think that we are miracle workers who can turn failures into distinctions overnight; others just treat us as agony aunts.
On top of all these, we need to answer to our heads of department and principals when it comes to 'producing' the number of passes or distinctions. Teachers teaching the graduating classes are often made out to be the heroes or sinners when the results are released. The pressure is overwhelming. 'Results are not everything' is a myth!
Despite all these woes, I had no regrets going into teaching. I have had the privilege of getting to know a few batches of fantastic students at Hwa Chong Junior College and Fuhua Secondary School, who still keep in touch with me. They were the reason I decided to teach in the first place and they were definitely the highlight of my teaching career.
The truth is, teachers are no saints. They have only 24 hours a day just like any one of us, yet their responsibilities and duties are so demanding that their family life and their physical and emotional health are sometimes compromised.
And I believe that, at the end of the day, teachers who left did so not because they stopped believing in what they did but rather they believed in it so strongly that they did not think they could accomplish all that without making any compromise in the other areas of their lives.
Elaine Toh-Tan Yee Lin (Mrs)
*clap clap* let's all applaud her bravery in daring to stand up against the screwed-up education system and air all her grievances!!! And anyway, despite the screwed up system, she's all in all still a remarkable teacher.. and that's how Jing and I managed to get B3 for GP in our A levels despite scraping past with many Cs and sometimes even Ds for block tests, promos and prelims. Yep. Even Mrs Toh herself could not believe we got B3. Hehe
9 Comments:
I MISS MRS TOH!!! think she's really a great teacher. really sweet nice n pretty~.. gosh.. but i dun like charlie! haha.. that stupid mad irritating dog, run ard us like some mad freak. hah.. anyway is mrs toh in singapore?? thot she's overseas with her hubby??
Arghhh!
I read that article and even cut it out! hahaha.
So excited to hear her "voice" again.
Hmmm, heard from mrs toh she's supposed to be in china wif her hubby who's posted there as a teacher in a private school. woah!
All the way to china to be a teacher!
mrs toh's not in spore anymore? *sobs* what's gonna happen to charlie the gay dog? lol. i'm surprised she actually wrote to ST tho. =)
Eh.. I dunno where she is leh.. yep but I miss her too!!! she's a really great teacher. Her husband posted to China to teach wat? PE? he was a PE teacher rite?
teach pe in china? *laughs like mad*
Teach english la ....
u think china lacks PE teacher?!
Dunno leh. Her husband is not an English teacher I thought?
Hmmm, i think any SINGAPOREAN can be an English teacher in CHINA right?
true true.. haha
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