-
36 votes
-
Reasons to be cheerful about Generation Z
16 votes -
A collection of stories about kindness at work
29 votes -
$1 billion donation will provide free tuition at a Bronx medical school
21 votes -
The myth of the unemployed US college grad
31 votes -
Residents of Luleå, Sweden welcome new campaign encouraging them to say hello to each other during dark winter months
12 votes -
An enigma who lived frugally left his New Hampshire town millions it never knew he had
19 votes -
Why am I becoming a teacher?
First of all, this is a lot about me and myself and I'm sorry it's a bit self-centered; it's been bouncing around my head and I want to get it out somewhere. Please let me know if this isn't...
First of all, this is a lot about me and myself and I'm sorry it's a bit self-centered; it's been bouncing around my head and I want to get it out somewhere. Please let me know if this isn't appropriate here.
Secondly, teachers or those in training to become one: I want to hear your thoughts on this question.
Why am I becoming a teacher?
I've been finding that I'm asking this question of myself a lot lately. My goal is and always has been the same for years: I want to teach, I feel good teaching, I feel I have a purpose and that purpose has been what's driven me forward when I wanted to give up. Truly though - why do I want to be a teacher?
I could do the same style of work in other settings. I could become a tutor, self-employed or otherwise, and assist students in a specific capacity. I could be a YouTuber, creating video essays on self-researched subjects of passion. I could be a writer, bringing the same content through literature to a wholly different audience. In all of these, there is the potential to make more money, reach a wider audience, and leave a more indelible impact upon the world.
So, why am I becoming a teacher?
15 years ago, I dropped out of college, suffering depression. I wasn't the only one depressed; aside from the millions of others reeling from mental health issues, the economy was entering a recession in 2008. I was a NEET - jobless, out of school, and seemingly stuck. My family (read: my dad, stepmom, and sisters) had abandoned me - they had other matters to worry about than their wayward son - and I was fortunate my mother whom I'd dissociated from years before reached out to me. With her help, I got back on my feet, moved across the country, and began looking for work with slight hope. I volunteered one day to read at the school she worked at, and the teacher in the room went to the admins and demanded I be hired on the spot. I was.
Thus began a journey of discovery. I was good at something, and I felt good about doing it. I felt something to replace my depression and self doubt: worthiness.
Over the years, I honed my craft and continued sporadically attending school - when I could afford it - in order to become able to lead my own classroom in our private school/daycare. That was 7 years ago, and I've been teaching prek (4-5 year olds) since then. I'm able to teach reading, writing, mathematics, chess, life lessons, history, biology, astronomy, geology, entomology... the list goes on and on. I have a passion for learning, and for sharing that learning.
Is that why I am becoming a teacher?
The biggest obstacle to achieving my ultimate dream - teaching in public schools - was always the degree. I had dropped out of college twice - in 2008 and again in 2013 - before finally completing an Associates degree in 2016. I felt that, financially, getting my bachelor's would never happen. Massive student loan debt (private debt north of $30k) and low wages in childcare meant I wasn't getting anywhere. Life changes though, and the stars aligned - the private debt was written off, I got out of defaulting on my federal loans, and just in time to qualify for a state program to get me in school again and have a full ride scholarship. It was happening!
Now we live in a post-pandemic world... Do I still want to become a teacher?
At first, attitudes were siding with teachers. There was sympathy for their struggles and worries, the low pay and high barrier to entry. That quickly changed, as it did for medical workers and others in the pandemic world. Teachers struggle more now than they have before. Fewer resources, more troubled students that desperately need help, more resistance from parents and communities trying to prove that teachers and schools aren't necessary in the way they have been, and more burnout and shortages across the nation.
I see all this and yet I press on. Why?
The thing is, I'm not sure. My resolve is strong and I've been persistent and diligent in my schooling. I've worked too long and hard to give up this opportunity. Why do I still want to teach, though? Why not find an administrative job with potentially more pay and better work environment? Why not leave education altogether and use my skills elsewhere?
It comes back to what drove me forward in the first place: purpose. I feel in direct connection with the future by doing what I do. I feel like in some miniscule, imperceptible, but meaningful way, I can help create a better world tomorrow by doing what I do today. It gives my life meaning, and nobody and nothing can take that from me. I've changed hundreds, potentially thousands, of lives already. Students return years later to tell how much I meant to them - these are students I had known at ages 4 and 5 who still remember me a decade later!
So, why am I becoming a teacher?
Because someone has to do it, and that someone might as well be me. I enjoy my work, I enjoy the ups and downs, I enjoy the struggles and challenges and overcoming them, I enjoy making difficult topics understandable to young minds, I enjoy what I do even when I hate it. To me, that's love.
With good luck and a positive outlook, I'll be graduating with a degree in Early Childhood Education next September. It may not be prestigious, it may not make me a lot of money, but it will allow me to continue on the path I've set myself. Thanks for reading.
26 votes -
In this Arizona city, kids with autism are more than welcome
23 votes -
Kids’ reading scores have soared in Deep South states
13 votes -
Murhaf raises $230,000 selling charity flower pins in Sweden – sales skyrocket after a viral post about the boy, and a racist backlash, only brings in more money
2 votes -
Denmark to grant asylum to all women and girls from Afghanistan
11 votes -
US citizens can now sponsor refugees directly. Here’s how to apply.
9 votes -
Finland defence minister to take two months' paternity leave amid NATO bid – Antti Kaikkonen says 'children are only little for a moment'
8 votes -
This 33-year-old made more than 1,000 Wikipedia bios for unknown women scientists
15 votes -
Map drawn from memory helps man reunite with family decades after abduction
4 votes -
Good blessings
4 votes -
The truth about my son
8 votes -
Covid-hit New Orleans turns homes into floats for Mardi Gras
5 votes -
Meet 'Lady Ninja,' the 67-year-old who beat up a man attacking her friend — and saved her life
9 votes -
Sixteen-year-old student gets thousands of primary school children to write to lonely care home residents
7 votes -
Photographing orphaned baby squirrels in the wild – photographer and zoologist Dani Connor 'adopted' four squirrels after their mother died
7 votes -
Family buys all of a Chicago paletero’s ice pops on Father’s Day, collects nearly $40K for him: ‘He refuses to stop working’
4 votes -
Thousands of people queue up online for drive-thru ‘safari’ at Toronto Zoo
6 votes -
An ode to the unexpected whimsy (and strength) of your mail delivery
7 votes -
Prison inmates in Western Australia made 100 school desks in less than two weeks to donate to families for children homeschooling during the coronavirus pandemic
5 votes -
Love in coronavirus times – couple meets for dates on closed Danish-German border
5 votes -
How people are spreading joy and connecting duing the coronovirus lockdown
4 votes -
Cartoonist draws a happy ending for twins that he accidentally put on the "naughty list"
7 votes -
Oregon woman turns school buses into tiny homes for working homeless families
7 votes -
‘I have $1500 that I’m giving away’: Man becomes legend for extreme acts of kindness toward strangers
10 votes -
Lady Gaga to fund 162 classrooms in Dayton, El Paso and Gilroy
15 votes -
Four people to be thankful for
3 votes -
A video of a man saving a toddler's life at great risk to his own
@ladyhaja: Holy shit, this guy is amazing. What a hero. https://t.co/XVWbaULkFp https://t.co/hHnF150XL5
14 votes