teacher
All about teachers and the world of teaching; teachers sharing their best and worst interactions with students, best teaching practices, the path to becoming a teacher, and more.
Building Confidence in Math Education with Casie Hynes. AI-Generated.
Math anxiety continues to shape the way many students experience education, but educators like Casie Hynes are showing that a different approach can make a lasting difference. Through a focus on emotional awareness, student-centered instruction, and practical classroom strategies, Casie Hynes has highlighted how anxiety is often rooted in the learning environment rather than a lack of ability. By addressing these underlying factors, her perspective encourages a shift toward building confidence and resilience in mathematics.
By Casie Hynesabout 5 hours ago in Education
Dumbest School Rules Ever
I've been out of school for nearly 20 years, but there were ridiculous rules in school that I thought were ridiculous. In this story, I'll go over a few school rules that were outlandish. If you see a school rule that you didn't see on this list, feel free to comment down below. Also, once you finish reading this story and enjoyed it, please send me a one-off tip down below to show your support for creators like me. That'll encourage me to continue writing new stories.
By Mark Wesley Pritchard a day ago in Education
Cybersecurity Specialist Career: Roles, Skills, and Career Outlook
With the number and cost of cyberthreats growing exponentially, cybersecurity has become one of the top priorities for organizations globally. Every sector, from finance to healthcare and education to government, is vulnerable to various kinds of cyberthreats. It requires robust security measures to protect critical infrastructure and sensitive data.
By Pradip Mohapatra4 days ago in Education
Is Evidence-based Medicine a Joke?
The medical profession often brings to mind the image of the proverbial ostrich: burying its head in the sand, hoping problems will disappear. While doctors claim to practice evidence-based medicine, there is a glaring oversight when it comes to mental illness. They routinely ignore the growing evidence that our thinking itself is a hypnotic process—that we are, in a sense, continually self-hypnotising through our inner dialogue. The profession’s lack of understanding about hypnosis and its mechanisms results in a reluctance to investigate this mystery. Rather than exploring how ego and self-hypnosis shape mental states, many in the field shy away, perhaps because it requires confronting their own egos. This avoidance is neither scientific nor professional.
By Mal Mohanlal5 days ago in Education









