Three days in, I have learned the following about high schools students:
- Like elephants, lions, bears and tigers, (oh my) high school students can smell fear.
- Nagging, while ineffective with husbands, is extremely effective with the unmotivated student.
- No student really likes to look unintelligent.
- A high school student's reputation is precious. Damaging it through humiliation is deeply painful and should be avoided in almost all circumstances.
- Often when you say "please" and "thankyou," your students will too.
- The ability to laugh at oneself is a powerful weapon.
- The dean will always scare a student more than you will (at least when you're 5"3'). Let him (or her) do the yelling.
- A student would rather avoid a situation than fail in it, whether it is an assignment, a question or a discussion. Creating a safe environment for failure is essential to the learning process.
- Students are prepared to hate substitutes long before they are prepared to like them.
- Eyes in the back of your head are unreservedly necessary.
5 comments:
I think it takes a brave soul to venture back into high school!
Perhaps you should teach the class for new substitutes. You know, the one that doesn't exist but *should* :)
Hahaha! This is great! I'm so glad you're subbing for us!!! I know its not the greatest job but at least we have some good people doing it!
Thanks again!
Don't you remember how to balance chemical equations from Mrs. McGiness' class? The only think I remember from that class is setting something on fire in the lab and singing a little jingle about Avagadro.
Keen insights. I felt like I was getting a crash course in anthropology during my stint, although I generally dealt with middle schoolers which is a whole different people group.
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