24-hour Support for New Teachers
Tips, Humor, and Encouragement for the First Years of
Teaching
By Laura Kelly,
originally published in ASCD Educational Leadership
Beyond the classrooms and
halls of their schools, new teachers may still feel
overwhelmed by the realities of their new profession.
Where is a new teacher to turn
at 2 a.m. when she's wondering whether teaching was the
right decision? Here's a collection of Web sites that
offer 24-hour guidance, encouragement, and teaching
help. Chances are, they won't mind a late-night visit
nearly as much as your mentor would.
Help and Advice
for Teachers, from Teachers
Beginning Teacher's Tool Box (http://www.inspiringteachers.com),
by the veteran teachers of Inspiring Teachers Publishing
Group, offers everything from an "Ask Our Mentor a
Question" section, where you can e-mail questions to a
veteran teacher, to "Tips for New Teachers" (click
"archives") that include inspiration, humor, and the top
10 things to do before school starts. Check out the
Beginning Teachers Message Board where you can ask for,
or offer, advice.
The goal of Teachers
Helping Teachers (http://www.pacificnet.net/~mandel)
-- "by teachers, for teachers" -- is to provide basic
tips to beginning teachers -- things that can be
immediately implemented in the classroom. It offers
lesson plans and features like "Poem of the Week" and
"This Week's Stress Reduction Moment." This site has a
list of educational Web sites organized by subject area
and topic.
New teachers should
definitely check out the "Mentor Support Center" from
Teachers.net (http://www.teachers.net).
This feature (click "chatboards") brings together
educators in category-specific chatboards and chatrooms
-- there's one specifically for beginning teachers. The
site also includes lesson plans, live meetings, a list
of useful resources, and a newsletter.
Designed to encourage new
teachers and those studying to be teachers, I Love
Teaching.com (http://www.iloveteaching.com)
offers the experiences and wisdom of a veteran teacher.
Click "Tid-Bits" for a list of things a rookie teacher
wishes she had known before stepping into the classroom.
A Homepage for New Math
Teachers (http://www.clarityconnect.com/webpages/terri/terri.html)
has information that all new teachers can use, including
how to connect with students and tips on classroom
management. Whether for class ideas or just for fun,
check out the monthly math problem and the archive of
"Most Loved Problems."
Words of Advice
and Inspiration
What to Expect Your First Year of Teaching (http://www.ed.gov/pubs/FirstYear/)
is a great resource for new teachers. It's a compilation
of award-winning first-year teachers' experiences,
challenges, and successes. It includes tips on how to
have a successful first year, advice from veteran
teachers, and a discussion about the things for which no
training could have prepared them.
"Great Expectations:
Helpful Hints for Beginning Teachers" (http://www.positiveparenting.com/resources/feature_article_018.html)
is an essay from Positive Parenting On-Line about what
new teachers should know, should do, and shouldn't be
afraid to ask. It is a practical look at ways that
teachers can approach their first year with realistic
expectations and how they can grow from those early
experiences.
Guides That You
Shouldn't Live Without
What list of Web sites would be complete
without a site with, well, a list of Web sites? Of all
the lists of education Web sites, Kathy Schrock's Guide
for Educators (http://discoveryschool.com/schrockguide/)
is probably the most comprehensive. It has a wide range
of topics and is organized so that you don't have to be
an Internet wiz to find something you can use.
Every teacher, beginning
or veteran, should know how to use the resources of the
U.S. Department of Education. The New Teacher's Guide to
the U.S. Department of Education (http://www.ed.gov/PDFDocs/tchguide.pdf)
contains a wealth of information to be had, free of
charge, if you just know how to find it. This
comprehensive guide will tell you; it'll probably even
help you find things you didn't realize that you needed.
----------------
Laura Kelly is a Project Assistant for ASCD's
Newsletters and Special Publications. "Web Wonders" also
appears in the ASCD Education Bulletin under
Publications & Multimedia on the ASCD Web.
Source: Laura
Kelly. "Web Wonders." Educational Leadership
(vol.56, no. 8, May 1999). Alexandria, Va.: Association
for Supervision and Curriculum Development.
For more articles on
educational leadership, visit
Educational Leadership on the
ASCD Web site. |