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Alex Case, teacher and freelance EFL writer, TokyoBack to "Guest Authors" Main Page. Back to "Alex Case" Index. Time Management for Teachers (or 'Managing to Teach 25 Hours a Week')This article and the accompanying worksheets are based on a workshop I gave to a group of teachers who were about to finish their four-week initial teaching course, and were somewhat panicked by the prospect of teaching 25 hours a week- as it took them every waking hour to prepare their 4 weekly lessons during the course. If you missed out on such a workshop, this article could well be for you (wherever you are in your teaching career). If your time management is good, you can use this as a format to pass your skills onto your stressed-looking colleagues! Think about time. To start, think about 'the world's least efficient teacher' and list all the things that take up their time when they are at work. There are suggestions further down. In your own time. Now decide how long it takes you to prepare for one lesson. If it varies a lot, either take an average or just pick a number that sounds reasonable. Draw a circle to represent that preparation time. Divide it into five or ten minute segments (e.g. six ten-minute segments for an hour's preparation time). If you are working with someone, interview each other on how much time you spend doing the things listed in the 'the world's least efficient teacher' list (e.g. 'How long do you spend deciding which bit of the textbook to cover in the lesson?') and divide the circle into (labelled) segments representing those activities. If you are own your own draw your own segments. Lifesaver Either show your circle to someone else, or look at it yourself and find the biggest segments. Is there anyway the time spent on those things could be cut down? Manage it like a manager Look at the 'Top time management tips for businessmen' and see if any of them could be relevant to TEFL teaching- and specifically to your situation. Pass it on Time management is just as useful for your students as it is for you (especially exam students and businessmen), and doing it in class can be a great way of reminding yourself of the tips! Time Management for Teachers- Photocopiable Worksheet When Kim, the world's least efficient EFL teacher, is preparing a lesson he or she
Top time management tips for businessmen (in no particular order)
Looking for other ESL sites like this one? Other ways of saving yourself precious time and energy? Only those sites which have been hand picked to offer the best to the teachers who use them? The site below has over 700 quality education links. Click the link and you will find a wealth of teachers' sites on which you will find thousands of ready-prepared materials and resources. Just think - you may never have to plan a lesson again! Top Education SitesPossible answers I think all the tips are relevant to teachers. I have made comments on the ones people have asked me about in the workshops or that I have some favourite tips for. 1. Decide on your short-term, middle term and long-term goals. 2. Work out when your most productive part of the day is and do the things that require maximum brain activity when you are at your best. 4. Do the worst jobs first. 6. Do all your paperwork in one session. 7. Schedule breaks. 8. Delegate 9. Finish each day by making a 'to do' list for the following day. 10. Organise an efficient filing system, and use it. 13. Only handle each piece of paper once. 15. Good enough is good enough/ Get results, not perfection. 16. Start and finish on time. 17. Get an egg timer and time how long you spend on the phone. 18. If someone asks you to do something, don't be afraid to say 'No'. |
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