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[personal profile] velvetpage
Every teacher I know, at some point in every year, has expressed what I'm feeling now.

It's not worth it to be away.

For every day of school I miss, no matter what the reason, I have at least two hours of preparation to do for it and at least two hours of tidy-up to do after it - marking, dealing with kids who wouldn't behave for the supply, etc.

I have to plan every lesson in much more detail than I normally would. (This is partly about my bad habits; there are some subjects, such as French, where I know my routines so well that I'm usually only planning something for about half the period - the rest is taken up with little oral drills and games. When I'm being lazy, I'll occasionally do an entire period of these, leaving me with no prep for that class. Obviously, I can't do that for a supply teacher. In fact, I have to plan on a supply who doesn't speak French. The same is true of Music and Art - I tend to wing it, or plan as I'm lining the kids up. They get a good program, but it's not up to the planning standards I should be setting. Heaven help me if I'm away unexpectedly!) I also have to mark every single thing the class does, because if I don't, they generally won't do anything at all the next time there's a supply. Also, I have no idea what has happened in my absence until I return, so I can't plan for the day I come back until that morning. It's a pain in the neck.

My kids now know that my guest is a) male, b)a friend (as opposed to a relative). They know it's someone I talk to on MSN. That doesn't narrow it down very much for them. And they know I've talked about this person before, though they don't know when. I'm having a ball with this. One girl wants me to tell his profession next. I told her his profession really had nothing to do with him coming in, so it wasn't relevant. They're starting to get really frustrated. I might play a game of twenty questions with them on Thursday, just to watch them lose. :) One thing is sure: [livejournal.com profile] rainwolf will be a school celebrity from the moment he walks through the door. :)

Re: Damn it I'm an engineer not a doctor, Jim!

Date: 2004-10-26 11:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] velvetpage.livejournal.com
Oh, we go for inclusion here too. I've just never run into any so far. Those with hearing issues, now - I've had about five of those. Several had little fm units. Those things are fun.

The school in Brantford is a residential school, and has been there a very long time. I'm not at all sure what its function is now, but I believe it caters to those who need more help than an educational assistant can provide easily. Since it's private, not public, it's outside my immediate sphere of knowledge.

Vision issues have fascinated me since I first got glasses in grade 3 (age 8). If I'd gone into any branch of health care, that would probably have been it.

Re: Damn it I'm an engineer not a doctor, Jim!

Date: 2004-10-26 01:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] r-caton.livejournal.com
Perhaps Braillists? Although Braille is a logical coding system (I used to work on Braille note takers such as the Blazie Braille Lite and Braille 'n' Speak...needless to say I had to use Braille to input commands! I used to use a "cheat" but still remember some letters....

Of course there is one letter in Braille that doesn't obey the logical rules...."W" why? Braille was a Frenchman and French doesn't use "W"....

Hey is that why "W" doesn't like the French?

Re: Damn it I'm an engineer not a doctor, Jim!

Date: 2004-10-27 03:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] velvetpage.livejournal.com
W doesn't know enough French to appreciate that. :)

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