$hiftyIceQueen
Banned
I don't know if anyone has asked this before, but whats better teaching at a primary school or secondary school? How do you choose between Primary and Secondary?
Year 11 and 12 students, maybe, but I reckon it'd be easier to get along with primary school kids than 7 - 10s. Still less baby-sitting-ish, though.uhawww said:EDIT: By "get along with the students" I mean somewhat make friends with them on a more mature level, being able to share interests and being able to treat them like adults.
I can't believe I forgot to mention that point. That's exactly my view other than what I stated earlier.Captain Gh3y said:I like the idea of doing secondary because it allows you to work with a subject area you really have a love of, and can hence explain it really well. Like, I find it easy to think of ways to explain high school level maths to kids, but I couldn't do that with english or the social sciences.
This is totally dependent on the relationship you forge with your students. f you expect them to be immature and rude, they will be.. if you expect mature adult behaviour, model it yourself, and reward those who display it, you will be more likely to behave in such a way that is considered acceptable. It is unfair on the vast majority of students to put them under the generalisation of being immature and rude!BlackDragon said:and the being able to relate to your students thing is v true. 6 - 10 are absolutely immature. you cannot relate to the m very easily at all. whereas 10 - 11 you can and 1 - 5 you are able to form tight bonds and have fun with your students.
That is not my experience at all. By year 11/12 a lot of students are not interested in learning for learnings sake but rather in achieving the highest possible marks regardless of interest.BlackDragon said:and the being able to relate to your students thing is v true. 6 - 10 are absolutely immature. you cannot relate to the m very easily at all. whereas 10 - 11 you can and 1 - 5 you are able to form tight bonds and have fun with your students.
so in the end i'm not sure which i actually want more. primary i spose. and if you choose secondary, you'll probably end up with 7 - 10 a fair bit and at this ages, kids are very rude, disrespectful and have a general disregard for learning.
As someone stated, I doubt this would happen any time soon considering the demand of teachers, especially ones that actually know what they're doing. From where I stand I can't see much of a problem with it? If they scrapped the dip ed it would really hurt a lot of people doing Arts with the prospect of teaching, and I know of a few people who plan to do it after Comp/sci and Maths degrees. These people specialise in these areas, how can it be so bad?rific said:Someone mentioned the Dip Ed. earlier? The winds, atm, suggest that, in its current form, it'll be scrapped within 3-5 years.