I'm on a Primary school teaching degree at the moment, having left a mind-numbingly boring, but otherwise ok job for this.
I'm currently on the first placement and I'm not getting positive feedback about my teaching skills so far. The problem, from my point of view, is that I'm not from a teaching background - I've no experience in teaching a class, behaviour management or anything like that - and I could do with some extra support to help during this time.
There are two "mentors" in the school, but both of them are the infants section, and I got placed in the juniors which has different break times and finish times so I rarely see them. The other student (this is supposed to be a joint placement but we've been split into different classes, so it isn't really) is actually in one of their classes and gets fulltime advice and help with her placement needs. I don't think she actually needs it that much as she's been working as a teaching assistant for the last year or so.
I've managed to get a failing interim grade and lesson observation and the mentor who actually speaks to me (maybe once a week as opposed to the specified 3 hours support each week that I should be getting) tends to ask "Are you sure you want to be a teacher?" and "Have you thought of doing something else?" which is kind of disheartening when I'm doing my best with the knowledge and abilities that I have.
I've sent an email to my personal tutor at university, so hopefully something will come of it, but I have to be honest, this has really kicked my confidence in and I'm not sure that I'll pass this placement or even be able to teach if I do.
I'm currently on the first placement and I'm not getting positive feedback about my teaching skills so far. The problem, from my point of view, is that I'm not from a teaching background - I've no experience in teaching a class, behaviour management or anything like that - and I could do with some extra support to help during this time.
There are two "mentors" in the school, but both of them are the infants section, and I got placed in the juniors which has different break times and finish times so I rarely see them. The other student (this is supposed to be a joint placement but we've been split into different classes, so it isn't really) is actually in one of their classes and gets fulltime advice and help with her placement needs. I don't think she actually needs it that much as she's been working as a teaching assistant for the last year or so.
I've managed to get a failing interim grade and lesson observation and the mentor who actually speaks to me (maybe once a week as opposed to the specified 3 hours support each week that I should be getting) tends to ask "Are you sure you want to be a teacher?" and "Have you thought of doing something else?" which is kind of disheartening when I'm doing my best with the knowledge and abilities that I have.
I've sent an email to my personal tutor at university, so hopefully something will come of it, but I have to be honest, this has really kicked my confidence in and I'm not sure that I'll pass this placement or even be able to teach if I do.




(we had 2 different subs over a 4-week period. One of them the kids were familiar with, the other one used a different system and the kids acted better in my classes) Note that this may vary between teachers: if you have a method you'd really like to try, run it past your mentor teacher first.
. (In order of my above list, that's difficulty with writing, difficulty with reading, difficulty with maths, difficulty with spelling, difficulties with reasoning and something else I can't quite remember, difficulties processing the information heard (NOT a hearing impairment))
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