Posted in Picture Note, Poster/Graphic

Monday Morning Message…Light and Shade


(c)DearTeacherLT2013 (You may use the image if you link back to the blog and/or give credit to Dear Teacher/Love Teacher)
(c)DearTeacherLT2013 (You may use the image if you link back to the blog and/or give credit to Dear Teacher/Love Teacher)

Good morning, Teacher!

I have been under the weather a bit over the last week, and it caught up to me a bit this weekend and I am dragging this morning.  I just couldn’t find a song for the weekly theme song!  I knew what I was looking for, but I just couldn’t find it.  I am really sorry!  I will try again this afternoon because I am out of time this morning.

I thought I would share this graphic/poster with you in the meantime.  As teachers, sometimes it is our job to be the light to students.  We need to show them the way to learn, think, and do this all on the own.  This can be hard because we are fighting their want to have things thought out for them and handed to them.  It can be a grueling job and quite tiring!    It can be a constant battle with some students and then a constant river of encouragement for others….and then everything else in between for the rest.  It is mentally exhausting to do all of this and to constantly be aware of what students need.

This there is the flip-side.  Sometimes we are not the light to students.  Sometimes we are the shade.  We do not always know what our students’ lives are like outside of our classrooms.  We do not know their struggles, hurts, and trials of everyday existence.  There is scorching heat that comes from life…like the noonday sun in the desert.  It is hard to keep going sometimes.  We all need a “shady place” when life is hard…especially our students.  Sometimes it is our job to be this shade.  What this looks like is different from person to person and student to student, but it is a real need.  We need to recognize when to be this shade and find a way to be it.

It is a difficult part of being a teacher to know what what our students need and to try to play the role that fills a need…but it is a part of who we are.  Let’s look for times today when we need to be light and when we need to be shade…and then let’s be what our students need!

You are awesome and amazing, as always.  I know you know when to be light and when to be shade.  I know you have the strength to be both.  Do it well today.  Cast light and give cover.  You can do it.  You are making a huge difference.  Never forget it!  Keep on teaching, Teacher!

Love, Teacher!

PS…Tomorrow is the last day to enter the Pinterest Contest!

Posted in General Inspiration, Hope for Teachers, Picture Note, Poster/Graphic

Needed Friday Message


 

(c)DearTeacherLT2013 (You may use the image if you link back to the blog and/or give credit to Dear Teacher/Love Teacher)
(c)DearTeacherLT2013 (You may use the image if you link back to the blog and/or give credit to Dear Teacher/Love Teacher)

Dear Teacher.

Something tells me that you need this message as much as I do.  Have a great weekend!  Get some rest and take a break…you deserve it!  You do amazing work!

You are awesome!  Keep on teaching, Teacher!

Love, Teacher

Posted in General Inspiration, Reason for Teaching, Reflection, Teacher Testimony

Tilted Windmills: Part II


(c)DearTeacherLT2013 (You may use the image if you link back to the blog and/or give credit to Dear Teacher/Love Teacher)
(c)DearTeacherLT2013 (You may use the image if you link back to the blog and/or give credit to Dear Teacher/Love Teacher)

Dear Teacher,

How the heck are you this morning/afternoon/evening (circle the correct choice)?  Okay, I thought that would be funny because Tilted Windmills: Part I was about my change in feelings about the results of tests.  🙂  I do hope that this reading finds you well, though.  By the way, if you haven’t read Part I, please go read that one first.  This post won’t make much sense without it!  If you read it the other day, you may want to skim it to get a refresher.

Are you back, now?  Okay, lets move on!

However, before I move further we need to talk about Don Quixote.  You know, the Man of LaMancha.  If you are not familiar with Don Quixote, you should be!  It is a great story of humanity and among the classics!  The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha was written by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra.  The story is about a man who leaves his normal life to take on a life of chivalry and eventually live in a fantasy world of knights, nobility, giants, etc…

The reason that I bring up Don Quixote is that that I am reminded about a part of his story.  As he and his “squire,” a farmer named Sancho Panza, were out on their adventures, there is a time when Quixote sees windmills along the side of the road and he takes off after them.  He “tilts” at them with a spear (tilting is a jousting term…go watch A Knight’s Tale for more on that) because he thinks it is an army of giants.  “Tilting at windmills” has become synonymous with the idea of going off after an imaginary enemy or fighting a battle that does not have to be fought.

Okay, enough with the literary lesson.  Back to school stuff.

So, I told you the story about the devastating emotional consequences of grading my first test as a first year teacher (on a Friday).  Then I followed that with what happened a week ago when I graded my latest test (on a Friday).  How did, in eight years, did I get from poor results shaking me up to poor results leaving me content?

Because the test data was not much different, obviously it is not because I am a spectacular teacher that can get students to learn and understand everything the first time through.  It is also not because I got so good at helping the students learn problem solving skills and test-taking strategies that ace every test that I give.  No, the test data was pretty much the same.  The change was not in that, and the change was not in the students.

That only leaves one thing.  The change was in me.

What was that change and when did it happen?

I will be honest, the change happened slowly.  As a matter of fact, it has only been in the last two years, or so, that I have started to view test results differently.  Actually, this was the first year that I have really felt almost completely at-ease about how a test went when it did not go well.

Wait, you never said what the change is!

I am getting there.  I just need to give a little more back story.  Give me a minute!

Okay.

Thanks.

You are welcome.

I used to view testing in a few different ways.  Tests allowed me to assess student learning (well-trained answer there, huh?).  Tests allowed me to assess how the students received and applied what I taught them.  Tests allowed me to see how well students might do on the State Tests.  Tests gave me some insight on the test-taking strategies that students have and use.  Tests gave me a stopping point to which I can move on to new content and material.  Tests judged how well my students and I did during the unit and what I probably ought to find some time to reteach.

Tests played a lot of roles in my teaching life, didn’t they?

Over time, testing became something that was make or break for me.  Therefore, test results became this harbinger of how the students were going to do during State Testing, and something that must be revered and feared for this reason.  Test data was disheartening.  It showed me the failures of my teaching and the failures in student learning.  It became even more disparaging and depressing for me as the years passed that it was that first year.

Over time I started to dread testing.

Then came school benchmarks.

My school started doing quarterly benchmarks in the core classes.  These results were as bad or worse than my unit tests.  They were rigorous and difficult, just like the State Tests.  The students hated them.  They seldom did well on them.  Because they were quarterly, and happened in every class, I started to only give these and stopped using unit tests.  The students were up to their eyeballs in tests, so I helped where I could and gave other types of unit assessments (mostly writing prompts for essay-type assessments).  Another side effect of the quarterly benchmarks is that, because of lack of time, they were results that I could not use because I could not go back and reteach anything.

I think I got “tested out.”

However, there was a positive result of those benchmarks.  My essay assessments gave me real insight on student learning.  I was able to really see what students knew, kind of knew, only knew by memory, and what they really understood.  I was able to truly differentiate and help scaffold students up to the understanding that they needed because I knew where they were with the content.  They did not have it always at the point of multiple choice questioning, and they was some of the problem on the tests.  I helped move students as far as I could in the curriculum based on what I found out from the writing.

Back to this year.  The essays taught me something.  Assessment is not about results, it is about data.  I had the two confused.  Data is knowledge, results are trying to judge success or failure.  Assessment should not be a goal, assessment should be a tool.  Assessment should tell us what students know, not know, and truly understand.  Assessment should give us clues about teaching strategies that worked and didn’t work.  Assessment should assist us in making  a plan for moving on.  Assessment should be what helps keeps us motivated to keep teaching.  We know where students are, now we can keep them moving!

The change was with how I viewed assessments and the resulting data.  They are not something to be feared.  They should be embraced.  I need to look at results more in the “why did this happen” mindset more than the “why did this happen to me” state of mind.

When I looked at my test data last Friday, it told me what I needed to know.  I knew what I needed to work on and with who.  I was able to start formulating plans for that work.  I had information.  I could use that information to push my students further on and further in to what they need to learn.  Why would this information make me happy?

Tests and test data used to make me feel bad.  But I was tilting at windmills.  I was looking at something that was mundane (I say this lightly…not that tests and data is mundane…but they are normal parts of the teaching life and not out of the ordinary) as something to cower and fear.  Data is not that.  Data is data.  It is information.  It is not a giant to fight, but it is something that can give me energy to keep on teaching and teaching better and better.

Are you tilting at any teaching windmills?  Are there things that you view as scary and as enemies that might just be the normal parts of the teaching life that can spur you on to being a better teacher?  What are they?  Tests?  Test data?  Observations?  Evaluations?  Parent contacts?  Any other menacing parts of the teaching life?  How can you change your mindset about them?  How can you use them to move on and be better without them destroying your teaching heart?

You are not alone!  We are all with you!  Other teachers do understand!  We really do!  Seek out a teacher to help you turn your giants back into windmills!  Can you help someone else do the same, too?  We are in this together and we need to help each other!

You are awesome!  You are amazing!  I know that you will stop fighting windmills and fight the real battles that we need to fight!  You can do it!  You are doing it and you are making a difference!  Keep on teaching, Teacher!

Love, Teacher

PS…I feel like I need to say this.  This post is not a commentary on State Tests.  It is about the every day teaching life.  Please do not read in to what I have said!  State Assessments serve their own purpose for who get the results.  I am not making a statement for or against State Assessments.  Sorry, but I did feel like that should be said!  🙂  Lets avoid doing this in the comments, too!  Thanks!  There are a lot of places for that debate.  Let’s keep it out of this place for encouragement.

Posted in General Inspiration, Teacher Testimony

Tilted Windmills: Part I


(c)DearTeacherLT2013 (You may use the image if you link back to the blog and/or give credit to Dear Teacher/Love Teacher)
(c)DearTeacherLT2013 (You may use the image if you link back to the blog and/or give credit to Dear Teacher/Love Teacher)

Dear Teacher,

I remember it vividly.  My first year teaching, and I gave my first major test.  It was a Friday.  I was excited.

I knew that I taught well.  I knew that my students learned.  I knew the test was good.  I helped come up with a test with questions in the same vein as the State Assessment.  The results were going to show that I had my students on the right track.  The fact that they were Title I students at a school with a reputation for never making AYP meant nothing.  They could learn and they did.

I was so excited to see the results that I decided to stay later on a Friday.  I made my way to the Scantron machine (for the younger teachers, we used to use these to score tests for us…this was before the Interwebs made testing easier).  I remember turning on the machine and hearing it warm up.  I got the scan sheets together by class periods.

I just knew I was going to hear more “buzz” than “clunk” (younger teachers, these are the sounds that this machine made…the clunkier sounds were the machine marking questions as incorrect).  I started running the tests…

By the time I finished my last class period, I was quite aware that I would probably have nightmares in which I was being chased by a clunking Scantron machine!  I don’t think there was one test with more buzz than clunk.  The results were dismal.  They were disheartening.  They will downright depressing.  I went home with my head hung low.  This was not the way to start a weekend.  This was definitely not the way to start a long weekend (which it was).

I vowed never to grade tests on a Friday again.  A promise I would keep for many years.

Fast-forward>>Last Friday

(Younger teachers, back when we had VCRs that used video tapes and cassette players with cassette tapes, we used to be able to advance them forward using the fast-forward button…it had “>>” on it.)

I gave the second test of the school year.  This time I used a web-based testing site called Quia (which I highly recommend…it is not super user-friendly, but  (great once you learn how to use it)

(Oh, and for you older teachers, we can give tests on the Interwebs now, they give us automatic reports and we can set them to pull from a question bank and everything…find a younger teacher to tell you about them and show you how to use them).

What is cool about this site is that you can, in a way, watch the results in real time (if you keep hitting the “refresh” button, which I do).  I saw how the students were doing on the test as they worked on it.  I love doing this.

The first test of the year went better than usual.  This test, however, was quite similar to the test I told the first story about.  I had high expectations, but the results were a bit of a let down.  There were far more “inccorects” than “corrects.”  Grade were not stellar.  They weren’t even atmospheric.  They were barely above ground-level.  This, like I said, was a lot like that first test grading experience I told you about.

There was a difference this time, though.  I did not go home let down.  I was, in a way, happy about the results.  Maybe happy is not the right word…but I definitely was not in a state of depression.  I was fine going into my weekend knowing what the test told me about the students and what they learned.

Why this change?  Why did I go from being destroyed by test results to being okay with them?  How did I get to the point that disappointing scores did not leave me very disappointed?  Why was I able to leave for the weekend borderline happy after a test not going well?

For that, you will need to “tune in” tomorrow for Tilted Windmills: Part 2 (younger teachers, we used to have to literally tune in TV and radio stations with a dial and antenna).

You are awesome and amazing!  I bet you probably see where this is going.  Even if you don’t, you are interested and want to know more.  This is why you are a great teacher.  You want to learn from the failures and successes of others.  This will make you grow as a teacher and make you the best teacher that you can be for you students!  Thank you for being this way.  I thank you for your students and I thank you for the future that your students will make better because of you.  Keep on teaching and growing, Teacher!

Love, Teacher

PS… Pinterest contest ends next week!  Don’t forget about it if you have been putting it off!

Posted in General Inspiration, Picture Note

Teaching Truth – Seeds


(c)DearTeacherLT2013 (You may use the image if you link back to the blog and/or give credit to Dear Teacher/Love Teacher)
(c)DearTeacherLT2013 (You may use the image if you link back to the blog and/or give credit to Dear Teacher/Love Teacher)

Dear Teacher,

How about a Teacher Truth for your Tuesday?  Here is a little reminder about who you are and what you do as a teacher.  You are amazing!  You are awesome!  You are making a difference and you are changing the future!  Keep on teaching, Teacher!  Don’t forget to be brave, too!

Love, Teacher

PS…Don’t forget about the Pinterest contest that ends next week!

Posted in Uncategorized

(I wanna see you be) Brave


Dear Teacher,

Good morning!  Ready or not, a new week is here.  Whether you are at the beginning, middle, or end of a school year, Mondays can be rough.  They are especially difficult if you are feeling the grind of the work that we do.  This is why I do my Monday posts.  This is why I give you a theme song for the day and week.  Sometimes I have a good idea for the song I want to use and words to write to go with it, sometimes it just comes together when I go looking for a song.

This morning I had a song and words in mind, but then when the search for the song began something else happened.  I found a song I have never heard that is amazing…and the message from the song is timely and needed by me, so I figure other people are in the same boat.  I hope so, it is always weird when the message is just for me!  Anywho, for those who know the deal, click play and read on.  If you are new to Dear Teacher/Love Teacher, click play, get past the ads, and then read on.

If you have time, watch the video again after reading.  It is a pretty inspirational video, at least it was for me!

Teacher, you stand out in a crowd.  Not because you want to, it is more because you have to.  You stand in front of a group of students every day.  You are in the spotlight.  You lead a group of people that need you to make choices that affect their future.  It is quite overwhelming, if you think about it, but you take it in stride.  It is what you are made for…it is what you do and want to do.

Embracing your role, though, doesn’t make it any easier.  And it is coupled with many other aspects of your job where you have to make choices that put a bulls-eye on you.  You have to fight curriculum battles.  You have to work on classroom management.  You have to answer to parents.  You have to answer to students.  You have to answer to administration.  You have to answer to your department.  You have to answer to your team.  You have to answer to your district.  You have to…well, I think you get the point.  You know this.  You are front and center for everything that you do and say in your classroom and beyond.

You have a lot of hats.  You play a lot of roles.  You do so many things, yet you have the heat of eyes staring at you constantly as you try to make the right decisions day after day after day.  You are, like the video, dancing in a crowd of people who are all trying to figure out what you are doing and why.

Sometimes, with all of that, there is pressure to put on a show.  There is the temptation to just do what is expected and never be outside of the box.  Even when you know that your students need more, the cop-out path of just following the status quo is always in front of you.  It is a way out.  It is an escape.  If you take that route, you can just blame the system if things do not pan out.  “I was just following orders” is so much easier to say than “I took a risk, it did not work out, and I am sorry.”

Teacher, I know you.  You know what is best for your students.  You know what they need and how to push and challenge them to bigger and greater things.  You know the risks, but you also see the rewards.  You know when to step out.  You know when to speak up.  You know when to take a stand.  You know all of these things…all you need to do is be brave and do them.

I want to see you be brave.  I want you to speak the truth.  I want you to make the choices that make your students better students and better people.  I want you to take the risks you need to take and reap the rewards that come from them.  I want to see you be brave.

Rest assured that the system usually comes around to the brave ones.  There were many teachers using technology before it was the expectation.  They had to defend their choices constantly, and now look at the world of education–the things that once seemed strange is the norm.

There were many “common core” teachers before Common Core was even a thing.  They had to defend and stand up for the way that they were teaching.  Science teachers had to defend the amount of reading and writing that they pushed.  English teachers had to give an account for why they thought informational texts were as important, or even more important than novels.  They fought and held their ground, and look at what the world looks like now.

Teacher, keep doing what you know is right.  Keep what is best for your students in sight.  Don’t be afraid to be brave.  Be brave today.  Be brave this week.  Be brave this year.  I just wanna see you be brave!

You are awesome.  You are amazing.  You are brave.  Be these things today!  Keep on teaching, Teacher!

Love, Teacher

PS…For those who are into Pinterest, there is a Pinterest contest that ends next week.  See the second half of this post from last week for details.

Posted in Poster/Graphic

A Poster of Your Awesome!


(c)DearTeacherLT2013 (You may use the image if you link back to the blog and/or give credit to Dear Teacher/Love Teacher)
(c)DearTeacherLT2013 (You may use the image if you link back to the blog and/or give credit to Dear Teacher/Love Teacher)

Dear Teacher,

Here is just a little reminder of why what you work so hard to do is far more than worth it.  You are amazing and awesome, no matter what your day felt like!  Keep going!  Keep pushing!  Keep proving your awesome everyday!  You are making a difference, I promise.  Keep on teaching, you Magnificent Teacher, you!

Love, Teacher

PS…If you are a Pinterest-er, check out the announcement about the Pinterest contest that was posted yesterday.

Posted in Challenge, Pep Talk

a Word from the (kid) President…and Pinterest Contest


Good morning, Teachers!

I hope your week is going well.  Thank you to all of you who have commented through the blog and Edmodo to let me know what the posts here mean to you.  Really!  It keeps me motivated to find the time to post.  I truly appreciate it!

Okay, so I am a little late.  Yesterday I finally saw the Kid President message to students and teachers…sad part is, I was one of the Twitter teachers constantly hounding them to do one!  It is a great little message!  I waited until this morning to share, because I figured it would make a great mid-week, Wednesday morning message.  The way I am dragging this morning, I think I made a good choice.  🙂

Without further ado…

As a science teacher, I love his science lesson!

“You’re here.  You take up space.  You MATTER.  It’s just science, man”

So awesome!

I also loved when he said:

“We can all be awful sometimes, but we can also be awesome.  It’s time to be more awesome.  And that’s what it’s time for.”

So, let’s do that today, Teachers.  Let’s be more awesome that awful.  It is time to be more awesome.  Let every one of us be more awesome today!

In other news…

I did not create this image.  This image is from www.pinterest.com.
I did not create this image. This image is from http://www.pinterest.com.

Dear Teacher/Love Teacher has embraced Pinterest!  To celebrate, I am going to kick off a Pinterest contest.  I don’t have much to give, but I thought about it what I can give, I think, is kind of cool.  The winner of the Pinterest Contest will get a forever coupon for the TeachersPayTeachers Store.  Anything on there now and in the future is yours for free…and I am working on some cool things (I think).  I will keep the winner posted when something new comes on the store, and he or she just has to let me know if they want it and I will email it.  Like I said, it is not much, but it is something!

Here is how the contest will work:

  • Step One: You have to be on Pinterest.
  • Step Two: Follow the Dear Teacher/Love Teacher Pinterest page.
  • Step Three: Create a Dear Teacher/Love Teacher Board.
  • Step Four: Pick your favorite three Dear Teacher/Love Teacher posts (or more) and pin them to the Board.
  • Step Five: Fill out the form below and in the “website” section, put the URL of your Dear Teacher/Love Teacher Board.

← Back

Thank you for your response. ✨

The contest ends on Tuesday, October 15th, and I will randomly pick a winner on Wednesday, October 16th.

Go, Pinterest!

I did not create this image.  This image is from www.pinterest.com.

I did not create this image. This image is from http://www.pinterest.com.

You are so awesome and amazing!  Have a great and wonderful day and rest of the week!  Keep on teaching, Teacher!

Love, Teacher!

Posted in Handwritten Note

Don’t give up…a note for you…


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Posted in Challenge, General Inspiration

This is Your Life [are you who you want to be]


Dear Teacher,

It is Monday again.  Are you ready for a new week?  I think I am…but even if I am not, it is time to jump into that river of the week and ride the rapids of a week in the life of a teacher.  Ready or not, here we come, Week!  🙂

You probably know what is coming.  If you don’t, click play and then keep reading.  Okay, if you are not a Harry Potter fan, don’t watch the video, just listen.  Oh, and I have used this band before, but I love them and this song is perfect for what I want to talk about!

I have the pleasure of being a middle school science teacher at a middle school that using the teaming model – a team of teachers in the core subjects (Math, ELA, Social Studies, and Science.  There are two teams and the students in each grade are split between the two teams.  This means that I am a part of a team with the other three core teachers, and I have a cohort teacher who also teaches science in my grade level (6th grade).  This year my science cohort is a first year teacher.  For this reason, I have been having to frame up who I am as a teacher more than ever this year…and this led me to an interesting question last week.  I had the thought, if the first year version of myself had to work with the current version of me, what would he think?

Quite honestly, I would say that I probably would have been scared of the current teacher version of who I am.  Not frightened, but scared of trying to think about teaching as I do now.  I would see a lot of what I do as being risky or not making sense.  I would admire the way that I can change and adapt to situations on the fly, but the whole “working without a net” thing would scare me.

As a first year teacher, I was focused on teaching what I was given to teach.  I lived and died by the standards.  The main goal was to deliver all of the standards and make sure I taught them to the T.  No time to waste.  It was about the standards.  If the students did not learn them by the end of the year, it was not my fault.  I taught them, and I taught them well.

That mindset kind of scares the current me.

Do not get me wrong.  I still teach my standards and teach them completely, but that is not my main focus.  My focus now is on learning.  How am I teaching my students how to learn?  My curriculum decisions have shifted from how can I best deliver the standards to how can the students learn what I need to teach them and apply the learning/concepts to other subjects and the rest of their lives.  I do not know how I ever taught any other way.  Is there any other focus that should have.

Because of this focus, sometimes my classroom does not seem very science-like.  The students write more for me than they do in English sometimes.  They are up, they are moving, they are thinking outside of the box.  I re-frame the model of teaching and learning constantly, and a lot of times this causes me to spend more time than normal on the set-up for a unit.  But it is for a reason.  When the students find a reason to learn something, they are more likely to truly learn it!  This is the same reason that I will give more time on a concept than I used to…or sometimes less time…because I have changed the frame of why the students are learning it.  When you have 100% engagement, it makes the different styles and methods of teaching (and the planning that goes into them) quite worth it.

This way of teaching would have been foreign to me in my first year, and that is why a teacher like I am now would have scared me quite a bit.

I could write a lot more about the changes in my teaching, but I won’t bore you now…let me get to my point instead.  🙂

Who are you, Teacher?

Have you ever taken that cold, hard look in the mirror and asked yourself who you are as a teacher?  Would the first year version of you wonder what you are doing?  Have you changed at all?  Why do you do the things that you do?

If you are a “newbie” teacher (first three years), you can take a look in the mirror, too.  When you first started your education program, what kind of teacher did you want to be?  Are you that teacher now?  Do you see a different kind of teacher you would like to be?  What will it take to be that kind of teacher?

The most important question: Why?

I said it above, but the most important question you can ask yourself is: “Why?”  Why do you do what you do in the classroom?  Why do you make the decisions that you make?  Why do you say what you say?  Why do you use the methods and resources that you use?

You can also use “Why?” in another pivotal way.  Look at teachers who are more like you would like to me and ask them the questions.  Why do you do what you do?  Why did you do that?  Why do you say that?  Why do you use those methods and resources?  Why do you “die on the hills” that you die on with students and “fight the battles” you chose to fight.  These questions are especially important if the teacher does a lot of things that are not necessarily “live or die” parts of their standards.

“Why?” is a life-changing questions.  You need to ask it of yourself and others!

This is Your Life

This is your life, Teacher.  Are you who you want to be?  Are you making the choices that you want to make?  Are you impacting students in the ways that you wish you could?

Today is a good day to start.  Start asking “Why?” today.  Once you have your answers, start moving from there.  How can you make a future self that your current self can be proud of?  Start building that future today!

(c)DearTeacherLT2013 (You may use the image if you link back to the blog and/or give credit to Dear Teacher/Love Teacher)
(c)DearTeacherLT2013 (You may use the image if you link back to the blog and/or give credit to Dear Teacher/Love Teacher)

Your are so awesome!  I know that do and will ask the hard questions.  I know that you will start to find ways to make changes.  I know that you will make a future self that other teachers will model themselves after!  You are amazing!  Keep on teaching, Teacher!

Love, Teacher

PS…A lot of you visited my Teachers Pay Teachers store last week,  I used feedback to completely renovate the store and products.  You can now get all of my current Awesome Notes for one low price, and they are much more user friendly.  The free product is even something that I love to use.  Please check it out.  The picture in this post is one of the  notes in the megapack, by the way.  Oh, and I promise, this is the last commercial for the TpT Store for a while.  🙂