Hi. I am 16 and want to be a teacher at the minute. I do peer mentoring where i help out in year 7 ,8 and 9 classes. I got to teach a whole hour of my year 9 group which was great. I also help out at brownies and guides and i did help at gymnastics and after school and holiday clubs. These have all boosted my confidence loads. I was just wondering if anyone on here was or is a teacher and if you could offer up any advice or tips thanks :) x

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They also call these In-Service Days here.
PD day means Professional Development. These are days where teachers aren't teaching students (they don't have school) and the teachers work on areas to improve their teaching practices. I'm sure there are many different names for such days.
Thanks steph thanks to everyone who has replied they have all been very helpful ;) x
am really looking forward to tomorrow get to go play with my moms best friends neice shes only about 3 but is the most adorable thing in the world we will have hours of fun playin hide and seek and then lookingfor animals whilst lying on our fronts on the carpet and then a party at messy play. so much fun cant wait ;) xxx
I teach at the university level. I shaved my head in the middle of a semester and never wore a wig or hat. No problems at all. I did tell my students about alopecia and that I was considering shaving my head a couple of days before I actually did. I think self-esteem had a lot to do with it.
thanks shelia its probably different working at uni level tho as they are more mature and sensitive still all the group that i work woth have never said anything and so i feel a great amount of respect from them. i will probably only be working with nursery and primary school age now i think as i am opting out of a levels and going on a child care course still if i decide at a later date that i want to teach high school i will just do more training thanks to all for your helpful coments xx
Hey There!!! I have been a teacher for over 10 years and have had AU for the last 4 years. I would say I wear my wig 50% of the time. I teach elementary age students and have never had an ugly comment. I think the best piece of advice to give you is to OWN your alopecia. I tell my kids that God makes everyone different. They really love when I dont wear my hair-just a ball cap. They all know me and everyone wants to be the bald lady's friend. Children as well as adults take their cues from your attitude. If you act like its nothing they will do the same. I think it also helps those kids who feel different identify with someone and feel good about themselves. In fact, this school year one of my students developed AA. I was really glad that she could look to me as a role model and it made her feel like she was not alone. I hope this helps!!! :)
tanks for this advice and i totally agree it wuake the kids be more cfident about the smallest things that make evyone different after al we r all unique xxx
Dear Velvet,
I am a teacher at the college level. I generally thing that college students are relatively open minded. I don't think they would taunt a person with a wig unless they really did not like the person. I am very lucky to have for the most part wonderful students.

I think everybody deals with alopecia in a different way. Some people are very head-on about it, so to speak, and are bold, bald, and proud. I think other people feel more comfortable with wigs and other head gear. Maybe you should think about how you have dealt with it in the past (i.e. are you really open about it, or do you really only discuss it with your family and close friends?) That might give you a clue as to how much you want to disclose about your alopecia to others.

It all depends on how the person himself behaves and it determines the attitude of others. For example, my friend spent two years working at https://writingpeak.co.uk/homework-help-online where he worked at homework help online, and during that time he gained courage, as well as self-confidence and now teaches at college. I think that everything will work out for you, the main thing is to deal with yourself, and the rest will follow.

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