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Opinion31st October 2018

Thrills, chills and spills: The things that frighten trainee teachers

We know that training to teach can be a little scary.

At , we understand that there are lots of little things that worry our trainees about entering the classroom. That鈥檚 why our team of experienced tutors, coaches and subject specialists work with our trainee teachers, supporting them every step of the way in their new career.

We asked some of our tutors to tell us what frightens new teachers the most, to share their own unnerving experiences and to give us some tricks to make sure you can be a treat in the classroom.

Blood-curdling behaviour issues!

Ryan: We often hear from new teacher trainees that they are afraid of how they鈥檙e going to manage the behaviour of children in the classroom.

Claire: It鈥檚 not that you鈥檙e afraid of the behaviour itself 鈥 what most new teachers are actually afraid of is what will happen if you try to exercise your authority in the classroom and the kids don鈥檛 listen to you. So the fear is that you鈥檙e going to be bad at classroom management.

Jo: This is the most overrated fear about becoming a teacher, because it really is possible to learn how to manage a classroom 鈥 the techniques are there and they are learnable. At 黑料情报站 Teacher Training, we do sessions where we show the trainees a teacher who has 鈥渋t鈥 鈥 that supposedly indefinable quality that commands students鈥 attention and makes them behave. But then we break down every aspect of 鈥渋t鈥 step by step for our trainees: the tone of your voice, your language, even where you stand in the room.

Ryan: It鈥檚 definitely overrated as a fear because the kids want to do the right thing. If you鈥檝e got high expectations of how your class should behave, they will rise to the challenge. If you don鈥檛 have high expectations, then you won鈥檛 succeed and that鈥檚 true for both behaviour as well as for academic achievement.

Petrifying parents!

Claire: When I first became a teacher, the thing that scared me the most were those moments when you had difficult interactions with parents. Most of the parents are amazing, but you do sometimes have pushy parents. You have to learn to manage their expectations.

Naomi: You just have to be pleasant and try your best to be helpful.

Jo: The best thing you can say to a parent is to tell them something great about their kids. It鈥檚 usually true.

Loathsome lesson observations!

Ryan: You often hear from trainees that lesson observations make them nervous. They鈥檙e worried that their lesson isn鈥檛 going to go as planned and that the observer is judging them negatively for their every move.

Naomi: If you鈥檙e the type of person who plans your lessons really carefully 鈥 so that nothing can go wrong 鈥 then it always does seem to go wrong when you鈥檙e being observed!

Jo: I used to have a lucky dress, that I would wear when I knew I was going to be observed. It made me feel better.

Naomi: What we say to the trainees is that lesson observations aren鈥檛 meant to be intimidating. They鈥檙e part of your professional development. It鈥檚 a way to help you develop your skills and we鈥檙e here, doing these observations to support you, not to criticise you. And we also say that these observations happen pretty often, so you might as well get used to them!

Creepy class trips!

Claire: Class trips are actually pretty frightening. You are always worried about losing a child, especially when you have to travel on the Underground. (I haven鈥檛 lost one yet!)

Naomi: The dinosaur trail in the Natural History Museum is really exciting, but some of the smaller children actually get quite upset when they get to the T-Rex exhibit. That鈥檚 scary for them!

Claire: You feel much more like a parent than a teacher when you鈥檙e on a school trip. You feel very responsible and you know that everyone is watching your students and how they behave. But sometimes people come up to you and tell you how lovely the children are behaving and that always makes you feel very proud!

Jo: The best way to conquer your worries about a school trip, as a teacher, is to be really organised and to practice. We do trip rehearsals all the time. School trips can be scary, but practicing helps make it all go smoothly.

Questions of doom!

Ryan: One of the things that can be nerve-wracking is the fear you sometimes feel, being in the year group that is learning about sex education. It鈥檚 not the topic 鈥 the curriculum is really clear 鈥 you鈥檙e scared of the questions that the children might ask.

Jo: It鈥檚 a lot of responsibility and children can ask very challenging and frank questions – you don鈥檛 want to say the wrong thing.

Claire: I had to do sex education when I was pregnant that led to some interesting questions…! If you have any doubts, the way around them is to run those sessions along with someone who has more experience. Among other things, you learn that you can鈥檛 answer every question and that there are certain phrases you can learn and rehearse, that will help you if you have to deflect a question.

Ryan: Like 鈥淢aybe you want to ask your mum and dad about that鈥︹

Jo: 鈥淭hat would be a personal issue.鈥

Claire: I like to say 鈥渢hat鈥檚 a good question but we鈥檙e not focusing on that today. Today we鈥檙e focusing on鈥.鈥 Another thing you can do is get the children to write out their questions on paper and then you can sort through them and pick only the appropriate ones.

The ultimate terror!

Claire: Overall, learning to become a teacher isn鈥檛 really scary. You learn techniques for everything that might come up.

Naomi: The only thing where I have no strategy for dealing with it at all is when children are sick on the bus on a school trip. Thankfully it doesn鈥檛 happen that often!

Jo: People training to teach are doing so because they really want to make a difference. I think the thing that they鈥檙e really scared of is somehow letting the children down. They want so much to do a good job, and we鈥檙e here to train them to make sure they can do it.

Faced your fears and want to know more about 黑料情报站 Teacher Training? .