Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
My answer implies that to adapt the curriculum to meet the requirements of students presupposes understanding the value of their culture and how education will prepare them to be successful in school and life. May I also add that you must have been absent on the days your teachers were teaching manners.To be a better teacher is to better understand the curriculum and how it needs to be adapted or modified to meet the requirements of the students in order to prepare them for academic success and their future in their work. It means becoming aware of local culture and how it facilitates learning. It is all somewhat complicated.I'm not mean-spirited at all, usually. I'm sorry if it came out that way. It's the Trump in me...
Just wondering what you picked up from living and working with people in other countries. There has to be more than becoming a better teacher, because you were helping kids in need in foreign lands.
So I guess my question is, how they made you better. Because that's enlightening stuff... And that's the stuff I like to hear about.
Sorry, but that's still a very cold, bland answer. For a teacher of kids.
That's why I questioned you in the first place...
They had nothing in their culture to teach you? They were just students that you tried to train using the training skills you learned?
Nothing about their life, or the hardships they face, and how we can all learn something here in America from them?
I'm now starting to question you... And I don't care if I sound rude. I now think you're full of BS, to be honest. Jus sayin...
My answer implies that to adapt the curriculum to meet the requirements of students presupposes understanding the value of their culture and how education will prepare them to be successful in school and life. May I also add that you must have been absent on the days your teachers were teaching manners.To be a better teacher is to better understand the curriculum and how it needs to be adapted or modified to meet the requirements of the students in order to prepare them for academic success and their future in their work. It means becoming aware of local culture and how it facilitates learning. It is all somewhat complicated.I'm not mean-spirited at all, usually. I'm sorry if it came out that way. It's the Trump in me...
Just wondering what you picked up from living and working with people in other countries. There has to be more than becoming a better teacher, because you were helping kids in need in foreign lands.
So I guess my question is, how they made you better. Because that's enlightening stuff... And that's the stuff I like to hear about.
Sorry, but that's still a very cold, bland answer. For a teacher of kids.
That's why I questioned you in the first place...
They had nothing in their culture to teach you? They were just students that you tried to train using the training skills you learned?
Nothing about their life, or the hardships they face, and how we can all learn something here in America from them?
I'm now starting to question you... And I don't care if I sound rude. I now think you're full of BS, to be honest. Jus sayin...
I'm sorry if it came out that way. It's the Trump in me...