3704. Do You Ever Have a Bad Day in Class as a Teacher?

 I’ve written a lot in this blog this far, I hope it may somehow help you teach your lessons. And I’ve also written a great deal on excellence, and we teachers – in principle – wish our lessons help our dear students. 

But what if my classes are a disaster, or if some of them are so, or my students put me to the test all the time? 

Today I’d like to say something on that. No one is perfect, and what teacher doesn’t have a bad day? Perhaps when you would wish to hit two kids’ heads to each other? I don’t recommend you to do that. 

Not long ago – and I currently teach adults – I remember I had a bad day, one of those days when nothing in class seems to work well, or nearly so. 

I’m now going to try and say something that hopefully might help out somebody else in our planet. Another teacher I mean. 

And I want to point out that all good I have has been received and inherited from somebody else – it’s not my merit. 

Some days ago, I was saying, in class I wasn’t attaining all go well. I felt a bit thick and dim, perhaps even somewhat nervous, and each activity to teach English was not turning out fine, you know. 

Well, I thought, now the main thing is to keep your composure, to keep the class going on, to serve my dear students, and they don’t have to pay for the broken china, to keep the class going to its natural end when the lesson will be over, and later anyway, I’ll have a mental look at today’s lesson to arrange things together for next lesson. Something kind of that, you know. 

And that’s it. And the world will not end. Nothing ventured, nothing gained. Let’s see next lesson, and while this one is still in progress, let’s try our best, for our dear students deserve all good from us their teachers. And also try to keep your dignity as a teacher and as a person. 

For further ideas on behavior problems you may click on this blog's labels or tags Discipline, Management of the class. Have a nice day and my best wishes of Merry Christmas.

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