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See Me After Class: Advice for Teachers by Teachers »

Book cover image of See Me After Class: Advice for Teachers by Teachers by Roxanna Elden

Authors: Roxanna Elden
ISBN-13: 9781607140573, ISBN-10: 1607140578
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Kaplan Publishing
Date Published: June 2009
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Roxanna Elden

Roxanna Elden is a teacher in the Miami, Florida school system and has developed presentations for new teachers at schools around Miami. She received her National Boards for Professional Teaching Standards certificate in 2008. Roxanna has taught adults, elementary school, middle school, high school, day school, night school, Saturday school and summer school. She has taught jobs in Chicago, Houston, and finally, Miami.

Book Synopsis


This is the book that will save rookies’ souls when they lose the strength to save their classrooms. With tales from more than one hundred veterans from across the country, teachers everywhere will find themselves laughing, maybe crying, and definitely taking notes. Readers at the toughest schools will be relieved to find a resource that deals specifically with their struggles instead of insisting that all teaching situations are the same. This is the book that will keep the great teachers of the future from quitting before they become great.

Many new teachers have been waiting for someone to break the “stay positive!” code and talk about the parts of the job that make teachers question their career choices. While other books cover the eyes of readers to keep from scaring them, this one asks teachers to be brutally honest about how tough teaching truly is and whether the rewards are still worth it. The answer is yes.

From the author:

I have never understood why so many books for the new teacher show apples and paper airplanes on their covers. In six years of teaching, no one has ever given me an apple. Any snacks students have offered me have come from vending machines, and teachers are not allowed to accept unwrapped food anyway. I have never seen a paper airplane, either. This generation of students knows that crumpled-up-paper balls are faster to make and easier to aim. Some unlucky teachers have had books thrown at them. In at least one case, a teacher was hit in the back with chunks of plaster from her crumbling classroom wall.

Even without serious discipline problems, new teachers often feel like failures. Not only do they take on all the issues plaguing the school system, they cause many of their own problems because of their inexperience. As a beginner, I sat through countless workshops listening to the heartwarming success stories of others. Then, carrying home piles of un-graded papers the night before report card day, all I could think was, “How did these poor students get stuck with a teacher like me?”

I also remember some generous, experienced coworkers who shared their own first-year horror stories. One described a parent who threatened to “f___ (her) up” during class time. Another talked about a hard-working student who was tormented every time he turned in an assignment, and a third confided that she was so overwhelmed she repeatedly turned in the same lesson plan. These stories were not inspirational, but during my first year they kept me sane. These were people who had become top-notch professionals. If their start had been so rocky, maybe there was hope for me.

Table of Contents

1 What This Book Is...and Is Not 1

2 The Ten Things You Will Wish Someone Had Told You 5

3 First Daze 15

4 Maintaining and Regaining Your Sanity, One Month at a Time 33

5 Piles and Files: Organization and Time Management 41

6 Your Teacher Personality: Faking It, Making It 53

7 Classroom Management: Easier Said Than Done 63

8 Popular Procedures That (Probably) Prevent Problems 89

9 The Due-Date Blues: When High Expectations Meet Low Motivation 103

10 No Child Left...Yeah, Yeah, You Know: Different Types of Students and What Each Type Needs from You 113

11 Parents: The Other Responsible Adult 133

12 The Teachers' Lounge: Making It Work with the People You Work With 139

13 Please Report to the Principal's Office 153

14 Stressin' About Lessons 165

15 Observation Information 173

16 Testing, Testing 181

17 Grading Work Without Hating Work 191

18 Moments We're Not Proud Of 205

19 Dos and Don'ts for Helping New Teachers in Your School 213

20 Making Next Year Better 221

Thanks 227

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