I have a BA in English Literature, M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction, 60 hours of Law School and 4 years of teaching elementary school.
BUT
That was 15 years ago and I have been traveling around the world for 15 years doing freelance work, writing, etc.
I am getting my k-6 certification back. I'll also get an ESL certificate in 2 months.
I would love Brazil but am planning on the Middle East.
After so long away, how do I get back into this?
Advice for a Newbie
Re: Advice for a Newbie
The same way everyone gets into it. Get certified and exhaust all your job searching options (fairs, agencies, direct emailing, networking, job boards, etc)
Be flexible starting out on location.
Be flexible starting out on location.
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- Posts: 155
- Joined: Wed Aug 21, 2013 5:03 pm
Re: Advice for a Newbie
I'm new, too. Another piece of advice I have is to take any and all Skype interviews...even if you're not interested. They're good practice and you never know what can happen. I had a Skype with a school I thought I was interested in but was hesitant about something to do with the the teaching. The director was very understanding and kind..he passed my name along to a fabulous school that contacted me the very next day.
I don't have a job yet but I'm getting close!
Good luck!
I don't have a job yet but I'm getting close!
Good luck!
Re: Advice for a Newbie
Much appreciated.
I am very new back at this. Will my 15 year absence from teaching be a major drawback for most schools?
I am very new back at this. Will my 15 year absence from teaching be a major drawback for most schools?
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- Posts: 155
- Joined: Wed Aug 21, 2013 5:03 pm
Re: Advice for a Newbie
I think you just have to put your hat in the ring and see what happens. It (your teaching absence) might be against you in December/January...but in April/May or later you'll probably be looking really good to a school that needs a teacher!
Re: Advice for a Newbie
MidTMike,
Yes, being away from the classroom for 15 years will be a drawback for most schools. There have been changes in instructional and assessment strategies (Readers/writers workshop for example). The best advice I can give is take any job you can get, gain experience and then you can go after more established schools and/or more desirable countries.
Yes, being away from the classroom for 15 years will be a drawback for most schools. There have been changes in instructional and assessment strategies (Readers/writers workshop for example). The best advice I can give is take any job you can get, gain experience and then you can go after more established schools and/or more desirable countries.