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Liberal Arts Society

@liberalartssociety / liberalartssociety.tumblr.com

Adam, 28, England. Teacher of Religion, Philosophy and Ethics, Cambridge  Philosophy, art, literature, coffee, libraries, art gallieres
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So as I think you all know I’m not a student any more, I’m a teacher now! However I got to thinking today how I’d study if I was to go back to being an undergraduate again. 

I talk about digital notetaking using Goodnotes, annotating handouts, creating a knowledge base in Notion and essay planning using Notion. I’ve included the templates in there too! 

Please let me know what you think as I want to do more YouTube videos but I need some advice on how things are going!

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11.02.2018 // I’ve been working five days-a-week as a teacher since New Year but this week I get to take a week off. This morning I cycled into central Oxford for breakfast and when I got back the sun was shining through the windows in my room so I decided not to go to the library but to sit here and work instead. ☀️☀️☀️

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Though I am no longer a student in the strictest sense, a big part of my career as a teacher involves studying and reading. 

I wanted to make some videos with the spirit of my old studyblr habits and I’ve started with this one - a 40 minute study-along in my London flat.

Please do let me know what you think and if you have any other ideas for my new study-focused YouTube channel.

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Hi, I am currently studying a PgCe after a MA degree and I am finding there are not many book rec's for learning how to teach and the theory behind it out there, especially not on tumblr. What books did or do you find useful for teaching? And do you know any with a slant towards humanities/arts?

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So here's my Goodreads education category, I read most of these this year and would recommend any of them but especially Making Every Lesson Count, Boys Don't Try and The Learning Rainforest.

I'm kind of a traditional teacher so these choices reflect that. I very much believe in the importance of knowledge and giving students access to a shared cultural language through education.

Drop me a message if you want to ask anything else ✌️

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Hi! I am also studying to become a teacher in the same subjects as you except with English as an additional subject. How does it feel to teach kids everyday? Does it ever get tiring? How do you stay motivated and how do you make sure you don't lose focus when studying while having to teach as well?

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It gets really tiring. I have never been so consistently tired in my life as I have been this past year. It is great though, there aren’t that many jobs where you get the intellectual freedom and creative stimulation that you do when you get to stand in front of 30 teenagers for 6 hours a day and teach them about things you’re passionate about.

I use Rosenshine’s Principles to plan my lessons so there’s no flashy PowerPoints or handouts, just simple, straightforward planning and effective teacher instruction. Things like auto-generated quizzes and chalk-and-talk teaching save me so much time.

I stay motivated because I love my job and because teaching young people about religion, philosophy and ethics is cool as heck. I try and be productive with non-school work at weekends and during the holidays, I very rarely do anything non-school related during the week.

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I'm thinking about going back to academia at some point in the future. Does anyone have any advice about choosing an MA or PhD? I'm particularly interested in theology and art history but I don't have a formal qualification in those areas.

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Anonymous asked:

may I ask what subjects do you teach?

I teach religion, philosophy and ethics. My students are aged 11-18.

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