Thursday, September 23, 2010

Back-Blogging: The First Day of the Rest of My Life :)

I could barely sleep before my first day. I was excited, nervous, scared, thrilled, anxious, and nostalgic all at the same time. I had so many butterflies in my stomach! I remember the day going by in such a whirl, getting to meet all the kids again, teaching them my rule song, our schedule, and the basics of school. I felt like all we did was go to the bathroom all day! Really, we spent about 20 minutes using the bathroom every time we went. We read a story about a boy who wanted a lunch box to take to school just like his older sister. The time with my kids was great! I had 15 kids at the time, which was perfect.

The mess happened during dismissal. There one of my students, MI*, didn't make it to her bus room because of a miscommunication between her, my aide, and myself. She said she was getting picked up, so my aide waited with the pick-up kids, while I took the rest of the kids to their bus rooms. MI's brother's bus teacher said he was was looking for her, and I said she said mom was picking her up. My aide told me everyone was gone, so I assumed she was picked up. Few minutes later I find out it was just that MI was taken to the gym where the kids go to wait, she wasn't actually picked up. By then, the bus had already left.  I was so mad. To make me feel even worse, I had another staff member say to me, "Who is the certificated person in the room? So it falls on you." I called home and a cousin answered. She said she was coming. About an hour later, cousin shows up, so I leave. 15 minutes later, I get a call from Mr. Blanton saying that her mom is at school, looking for her! I told him she was already picked up.

That night I was SOOO worried, I couldn't sleep again, but for much different reasons than the night before. I thought I was going to be in so much trouble, but things were fine. I've never had bus/transportation problems since :)

*I will be coding my kid's names to protect their privacy!

Monday, September 20, 2010

Back-Blogging: First Two Weeks of Professional Development (PD)

I guess I should catch-up to now, the 6th week of school. Where has time gone? I can't believe I've been teaching for that long already! But I'm getting ahead of myself, lets rewind...

Before school started, I had two weeks of Professional Development (PD). One week was for new teachers, and one week was for all teachers, and was building/content. Apparently, this new teacher training was a new thing! I can't believe that last year, I would have just been asked to jump into the classroom with no new-teacher specific training. Anyway, I went for three days to 801 (which is what our Central Office is referred to as) and listened to some useful, and of course, some useless information. Most of it was good, but for a lot of it I heard, "This doesn't apply to you because you are preschool."

That Friday, I met up with Ms. Joyce Stevenson, the other regular ed preschool teacher/my mentor at Mullanphy. Let me just say that the is awesome. The first thing she asked me was, "What are you most anxious about?" My answer was setting up the classroom, so we went to work right away on it. It wasn't very useful because they moved all the furniture out that afternoon to wax our floors, but that's not the point. The point is my mentor is great! She is always helping me out!

The following week started PD for all the teachers. I hadn't realized how many teachers are still at Mullanphy from when I went. Nurse Utley is still there, which is great because she is the best school nurse someone could ever ask for, along with about 6 other teachers. I'm the only new teacher in the building, so I'm the baby :) Everyone was super nice and excited that I came back to Mullanphy. The first day in the building was fine. The next day we started PreK specific PD at another school with all the other PreK teachers. I saw Jane O'Donnell (another awesome PreK teacher and robotics parent whose kids followed the same Mullanphy->Compton-Drew->Gateway High track I did). Of course all the other teachers were complaining, but I was the bright-eyed first year who was excited to get her career started!

That Thursday we had Open House with parents - my first opportunity to meet my kiddos! I was so excited and nervous! I had a newsletter and information sheet for them to fill out. It went well. I met about 8 kids. Friday was another building PD. Time to wrap up my room! Finish up! Get ready for Monday! First day of school coming up...

Saturday, September 18, 2010

How I got here

For anyone who doesn't know, here is a little background on where I am teaching/how I got here. I went to St. Louis Public Schools (SLPS) myself. Sharonica Hardin, the Superintendent of HR, was my 6th grade literature teacher. Being the great student I was, she remembered me and asked me to come interview back in February before I left for China. I went to see her - she was excited as was I! Teaching for SLPS is my dream and I was happy to be back interviewing. She asked me if I had any preferences of schools, and I mentioned Mullanphy (the Elementary school I attended) and Clay (where I did my internship). She immediately called the Mullanphy principal, Mr. Kenneth Blanton, and asked if he was free to see a former student-now teacher, of hers to interview. He said sure, so I went to interview!
At my interview with Mr. Blanton that afternoon, things went really well. He said he anticipated having an opening (yay!). We talked for a long time and we said we'd keep each other updated, since it was still pretty early in the year. I emailed both Mr. Blanton and Ms. Hardin my China Blog and kept them updated on my student teaching experience.

When I got back, I tried to meet with Ms. Hardin to secure a position with SLPS as soon as possible. Like in any field, the teaching job market was really tough and I didn't want let this one through my fingers. Mr. Blanton emailed me saying he had a preschool position open, and I tried to get a meeting scheduled with him too. For weeks nothing happened and I felt as though I was being stringed along. Finally, I got a call from Ms. Hardin asking me to come in. When I got there, she was having a meeting with elementary school principals, and I interviewed with three of them, right on the spot! One of them was a previous high school teacher of mine. The very next day, I got a call from Mr. Blanton saying he, "Heard through the grapevine" that I had a busy day yesterday and he wants to meet with me. Instantly, I had four job offers!

What to do? Where should I go? The other three schools were in tougher neighborhoods, while Mullanphy, my old school, is a Magnet School. One of the other schools, however, is a turn around school this year so was going to be involved in a lot of interesting changes. I met with Mr. Blanton again and he officially offered me the position. I accepted.

I choose Mullanphy because as a first year teacher, I thought it would be a better place for me to start. Not that I couldn't handle the challenges of one of the other schools, but I knew that starting my career somewhere that offers more professional support will be a better learning experience for me. Plus, the nostalgic and "just right" feeling was great as I walked through the building and saw my classroom for the first time.

So here I am - Ms. Doshi, Mullanphy Elementary, PreKindergarten Rm 023!

Friday, September 10, 2010

I was told I should blog...

...so here it is. Well, it was not exactly "blog," but to keep a journal about my first year of teaching. Being the tech-savvy girl that I am (or that the assistant principal professes me to be) I figured I should blog it and put it out there in cyberspace for the world to see. I was surprised at how many people mentioned that they read my China blog, so I figured I'd put this out there too. Granted, China was a much more interesting experience, but don't worry, I'll put cute pictures on this blog as well :)