Today's teachers are better trained and better prepared for that first day on the job than ever before. Policies and laws and general "good practice" have prepared our college graduates well. Student teaching requirements and excellent mentors during teacher training programs help our future teachers to understand curriculum, experiment with teaching strategies, and learn to interact with students. But teaching is not the sort of job that can be fully learned in a college classroom. Teaching requires practice and a fair amount of trial and error. Every student is different and every group of students are different. You can't be fully prepared for every situation when you begin teaching.
For this reason, I tell new teachers that they are not expected to know everything when they begin their career. I encourage them to ask a lot of questions and to seek advice from fellow teachers and from their principal and assistant principal. It isn't that new teachers aren't prepared to accept the responsibilities of the job--they certainly are. But teaching is much more of an art than some sort of mechanical process. Anyone can explain some idea or concept to a bunch of students. But a teacher wants every student to understand the idea so well that they can discuss it with other students, ask questions about it, and even build on this new knowledge and find connections to other ideas and knowledge that they already have.

We understand that it is stressful to accept a new job with new surroundings, new people, and new responsibilities. We want new teachers to be comfortable and confident. With adequate supports, new teachers can approach everyday knowing that nobody is perfect and mistakes are part of the learning process. This is what we tell our students and it applies to the teachers too. Teaching is an awesome responsibility, and understanding that teaching is a learning process helps new teachers to get through that first year eager to begin their second year.
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