please ignore the broken chair in the corner

it’s just another annoying teaching assistant

Archive for April 12th, 2008

In search of the Lesser Known Respect

Posted in Staff, The Daily Grind with tags , , on April 12, 2008 by thebrokenchair

Although there are occasions when I would love to get back into the classroom and actually teach,  I do enjoy being a Teaching Assistant.

My Level 3 position involves me wearing a variety of Hats on any one day.  Photocopier Hat; Filing Hat; Teaching Hat; Supportive Hat; Duty Hat; Register Hat; Teller-Off-er Hat; Praise Bounteous Hat; Telephone Hat; Research Hat; Data Hat; Talk to Parental Units Hat; Update Website Hat; Stationery Cupboard Hat; Ordering Stuff Hat; Revision Study Guides Hat; Let’s Gossip Hat; Resource Maker & Compiler Hat; Listener Hat; Cheer-up Hat; Prove My Worth Hat …

Sometimes I even wear my Tea / Coffee / Hot Chocolate Hat with pride [I make a mean hot drink, plus I'm the Queen of weaning teenagers off sugar without them knowing, oh yes].  Occasionally I don’t mind stumbling into the cupboard containing my Fetch This & That, Wench Hat – simple tasks can be a pleasure when one is feeling overworked and stressed.  Hey!  Even TAs get overworked and stressed, especially in the PRU environment.

But what really, really irks me is being treated as a piece of doggy-poo.  I may not be your equal in terms of pay and job-importance, but I should always be treated as your equal in the eyes of a student. 

I don’t mind my Fetch This & That, Wench Hat when the teacher is nice and treats me professionally.  I do mind wearing it when the teacher uses my presence in the classroom to inflate her own self-importance, and to show the kids the true meaning of the word bully

So, to vent my annoyance and frustration at a certain young teacher where I work, I have devised some rules which would look beautiful in a fetching display on a, hmmm … pink background, with a black wavy border.

Rules for the teacher -

  • If I’m standing next to the cupboard which contains the things I want for the lesson I will open the cupboard and get them myself.  This is most effective when I know where they are and the TA [who never usually works in the classroom] doesn’t.
  • I will not just say to a TA, “Can you go and get such-and-such folder?” without explaining where it possibly might be.  She doesn’t normally work in the classroom and is not a mind-reader.  When it becomes apparent that she needs my key to get in the cupboard I will not grumble. 
  • I will not allow my TA to interrupt another lesson looking for something which doesn’t exist, even when I desperately need it but wasn’t prepared enough to make sure I had it at the beginning of the lesson.
  • As I walk past the table I shall pull it round myself.  I will not wait till all the students are in the way and then ask the TA to do it, especially when the students are also perfectly capable of doing it.
  • I will not make sarcastic comments after asking the TA for input about something.   It’s not my fault she is far better at the subject I am teaching than I am myself.
  • I will make sure that the web address I want the TA to type into the browser is written down, somewhere.  Again, the TA is not a mind-reader.  I might even allow the students to type the address in themselves; after all, they are teenagers and do have some ability.  They don’t need to be spoon-fed. 
  • I will not act unprofessionally in the classroom.  I know that students need to know the boundaries, and me sitting there giggling with them is not the Right Thing.  I am a teacher, not a teenager. 
  • I will respect my TA at all times, because she is a person too and is actually worthy of it [usually].

Sometimes, the lack of professionalism amazes me.