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I was always a model student. I loved school, and I loved being a student. I still do. I love being a scholar with my pen scribbling fresh notes on innovative topics that challenge me.
While teaching, I enrolled in a certificate program. It was held twice a week in the evenings. The workload required a ton of reading and weekly summary essays on top of midterms and finals.
This meant that after a long day teaching at my full-time job, I travelled across town, sat 3 hours to learn new content (most of it irrelevant to my daily classroom needs), and then spent my weekends reading and summarizing someone else’s words. Twice in the semester, I didn’t leave my house to cram all the information I could into my head so I could answer questions the next day.
By the end of the semester, I was burnt out.
I asked, “Do I need external validation for my learning?” “Is this pressure the only way I’ll be a better teacher for my students?”
I dropped out of the program to regain control of my time and my well-being.
I chose to be a student without the pressure of credits.
Today, I learn for fun, out of curiosity, and out of necessity.
I hold the equivalent of a 27-year degree in education thanks to my firsthand experiences with students in the classroom and with my son at home.
When there is something more I need to know,
The quality of learning acquired through self-directed education far exceeds anything I’d acquire in a crowded auditorium.
My notebooks today are filled with relevant information I can apply the very moment I need it—not after I write an essay to receive an arbitrary grade by an arbitrary evaluator handing out arbitrary accolades and an arbitrary certificate telling me now I’m qualified.
Life is too short to have someone else decide what I need to learn and how much time I need to learn it.
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Continue reading my essays, activities, and case studies for supporting the education of disabled/chronically ill and neurodivergent children.
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