This year's final article summary is Teaching is Hard. Why Teachers Love it Anyway.
As we come to the end of another exemplary school year, all of us are exhausted and more than ready for summer break.
This final summary is a reminder that no matter how fatigued and frustrated we can get during a long school year, our jobs still provide us with much fulfillment.
When I was about to start my senior year in college, I remember talking my dad talking to me one night as we watched a Yankees game on TV. We generally didn’t share our feelings and stuck more to topics like sports, but for some reason he was in a more reflective mood that night.
From out of nowhere, he said to me that wherever my post-college career took me, he wanted me to be happy and fulfilled. He said that as a dentist, he had been able to provide financially for his family but that the job of dentistry was more a chore than a passion for him. He told me to try to find an occupation in which I loved getting up in the morning and going to work.
At that point I had no idea I would become a teacher. I was a history major at a small liberal arts college and assumed I would head to law or medical school after my undergraduate studies like most of my classmates. But during my senior year, I just wasn’t excited about going to either law or med school. I was a little burned out from my studies and decided to take a gap year to re-energize.
It was a freak coincidence that I was offered a job at an independent school teaching middle school English and coaching middle and upper school soccer, basketball, and baseball.
Within two weeks of working with kids in the classroom and on the sports fields, I knew I had found my calling and purpose – the epiphany moment in life we all hope to get!
I don’t think my dad thought teaching would be my career, but I am ever thankful to him for his advice and support.
45 years later I’m wiser, grayer, and more experienced, yet the passion I had as a 22 year old is still present.
I hope you’re as fulfilled as I am working in schools in general and Trinity in particular, as there’s no school I’ve worked in or visited that is as magical as Trinity.
Thank you all for a another great school year and enjoy summer break!
Joe
-----
There is no shortage of stories about how teachers have a difficult job. They work long hours for not a lot of money, and they are expected to meet a wide range of student needs – physical, academic, and social-emotional—physical, academic, and social-emotional -- with limited resources.
But the job can be beautiful, too. There are special moments unique to the profession—the inside jokes with a roomful of tweens or teens, the moment a student’s face lights up as they grasp a difficult concept, the feeling of making a real difference in young people’s lives.
Education Week asked teachers on social media to share their favorite part of teaching. Dozens of teachers weighed in, with thoughtful, heartwarming responses about what makes the job worthwhile.
The Lightbulb Moments: One of the most common responses from teachers was that their favorite part of teaching is when a student suddenly gets it. The times when students are curious and engaged in a lesson are what one teacher called “magic moments.”
- When you convince a student to not give up, and it is followed by a moment of insight leading to happy success, and then eight years later that student shows up to give you a hug and show you her doctorate...that is a heart-melting thrill!
- Seeing the 'I get it!' moment. Teaching math is tough but these moments make it worth it.
- Seeing my 5th graders' faces light up when they understand a math concept after trying many times. It is very emotional
The Relationships with Kids: The research is clear: Strong student-teacher relationships are key to student success on practically every measure schools care about. Those bonds and connections also constitute many teachers’ favorite parts of the job.
- Recess. Going out to play with the kids. Chatting with them about stuff, like movies, and pets, and vacations, and places to eat....you know, getting to know them as people.
- When kids get really into a book, movie, or video game that I share with them.
- Spending my days with kids. They are so much more fun than adults. So much hope, and intensity and excitement.
The Instruction: Teachers spend a lot of time in meetings and doing administrative work. But there’s nothing like the actual work of teaching, teachers said.
- Preparing lessons! No kidding. I dream about my lessons in anticipation for enthusiasm from my students.
- Actually teaching! There’s so much on our plate these days with testing and more testing, dealing with behaviors. I love just being able to teach. And forget about all the other stuff.
- Seeing students' lens on a topic, their questions and wonders, their perspectives and curiosities—a collaborative learning experience, so to speak, where you teach and they teach you with their curiosities.
The Subject: Many teachers entered the profession because they are passionate about a subject—literature, math, science, art—and want to share that passion with students.
- The read aloud! That moment when you go to close the book and the kids beg for "one more chapter, please!!!" For me, it's a great bonding time; and I love developing a love of stories.
- I'm an art teacher because when I was a kid, making art was the only area of my life in which I had any sense of control. I enjoy providing a safe space for students to express themselves while also learning a discipline that will benefit them later in life.
- I’m a music teacher. Allowing students to express themselves, learn collaborative teamwork and responsibility, learn to both give and take constructive criticism in a safe environment where it’s OK to make mistakes and try again….while having fun (and still learning a hundred standards that need taught). It’s gratifying to watch students create performances through music from start to finish and seeing them light up at the progress they have made. It was one of the things I enjoyed coming to school for each day, and I want to share that with my students.
The Lasting Impact: Many teachers said their favorite part of teaching is the knowledge that their work matters—and makes a difference in students’ lives for years to come.
- When they contact me long after graduation to let me know how much they learned in my classes. Really anything that expresses that my effort was not wasted.
- Seeing former students as successful adults. It reminds us why we do what we do.
- Seeing students apply the standards in my classroom to their own lives and seeing them succeed because of it.