How To Treat Teachers

How To Treat Teachers – The world of teaching is a lavish one.

Hundred-million dollar contracts, female-only parties, Goyard pocket protectors—sexy stuff all around.

So finally, after all these years of going uncovered, a network has dedicated itself to bringing us up-to-the-minute news on everything from the teacher draft to controversies at the teacher trade deadline.

Thank you for “Teaching Center,” Key & Peele. I’ve been bullish on Ruby Ruhf since she was reading Harry Potter to third-graders at Piedmont North. Good to see her finally getting the big-money contract she deserves.

How To Treat Teachers

Teaching is largely a thankless job. The pay is low, the work never ends, and students and parents can sometimes lack respect—a real shame given the colossal scope and importance of the task at hand. Things only seem to be getting harder. Some teachers believe the public school system is under attack, and many are uneasy about what a Trump presidency could mean in the classroom, not unfounded given his choice to head the Department of Education.

Good teachers have the capability to shape lives for the better and become profound role models. But that’s becoming harder too given the attention of students’ has now turned from the head of the class and into their handheld devices. If the American education system is in crisis, the least we can do is listen to the people who work in it. As such, we asked several teachers with various years of experience how they’d like to be treated by students and parents.

After reading “How To Treat Teachers” you can check important issues for ESL teachers on the section PDFs, and visit my YouTube channel.