- Видео 50
- Просмотров 85 421
whawkvideo
Добавлен 24 янв 2023
Hello! My name is Will and I run www.whawkvideo.com/
At whawkvideo we make animated explainer videos for businesses with complex products and services.
Please reach out if you would like us to make your business a video.
At whawkvideo we make animated explainer videos for businesses with complex products and services.
Please reach out if you would like us to make your business a video.
A professional gambler's guide to a 20 year winning streak #gambling #bettingtips #podcast
A professional gambler's guide to a 20 year winning streak #gambling #bettingtips #podcast
Просмотров: 2 691
Видео
Quitting Teaching To Start A Business... What They Don't Tell You
Просмотров 358Год назад
Quitting Teaching To Start A Business... What They Don't Tell You
How a Nobel Prize Winning Physicist Learns
Просмотров 884Год назад
How a Nobel Prize Winning Physicist Learns
The Balkan Crisis and the Origins of the First World War
Просмотров 2,6 тыс.Год назад
The Balkan Crisis and the Origins of the First World War
THE GALLIPOLI CAMPAIGN (in 9 minutes)
Просмотров 4,5 тыс.Год назад
THE GALLIPOLI CAMPAIGN (in 9 minutes)
The Battle of the Somme (in 10 minutes)
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.Год назад
The Battle of the Somme (in 10 minutes)
The Schlieffen Plan in 9 minutes | GCSE HISTORY | Conflict and Tension: First World War 1894-1918
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.Год назад
The Schlieffen Plan in 9 minutes | GCSE HISTORY | Conflict and Tension: First World War 1894-1918
MILITARISM in 10 minutes (First World War Origins)
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.Год назад
MILITARISM in 10 minutes (First World War Origins)
Was the FIRST WORLD WAR an ACCIDENT? (The Sleepwalkers Review)
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.Год назад
Was the FIRST WORLD WAR an ACCIDENT? (The Sleepwalkers Review)
The Origins of the First World War (in ten minutes)
Просмотров 6 тыс.Год назад
The Origins of the First World War (in ten minutes)
What happened to the 8,000 Lithuanians in Scotland?
Просмотров 8 тыс.Год назад
What happened to the 8,000 Lithuanians in Scotland?
Why did the Irish come to Scotland? (Migration and Empire 1830-1939)
Просмотров 4,1 тыс.Год назад
Why did the Irish come to Scotland? (Migration and Empire 1830-1939)
History: Migration and Empire 1830-1939
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.Год назад
History: Migration and Empire 1830-1939
Migration and Empire 1830-1939 Part 2: Pull Factors
Просмотров 964Год назад
Migration and Empire 1830-1939 Part 2: Pull Factors
Well said mate! Anyone who belittles teachers and down play the stress levels haven’t got a clue.
I’m a secondary school teacher here in Brum…have been for nearly 30 years. I nearly quit after my first placement. Glad I didn’t. I didn’t get into teaching because of my love of my subject, but a huge desire to work with kids and make a difference. This is what has kept me going and makes me good at what I do. It’s not a job, it’s a life choice. It’s bloody hard.
I tried teaching in my 30s back in the 90s. I experienced pretty much what he described but in spades. It's strange seeing a younger person finding out what I found out all those years ago. That includes the dreamy optimistic bit when you are training. The system get's new blood constantly. It feels quite biblical to see, but that probably makrs zero sense. One big difference is that my nightmare was pre-internet so you went tnrough it alone, completely gaslighted unable to see anyone else telling it like it is. If something stops you sleeping you know all you need to know.
ex teacher here - loved the Private Ryan analogy
Some people just aren't cut out to be a teacher. You can do all the college and training there is, and be as smart as they come, but if you don't have thick skin and don't know how to connect with your students, it wont be long before you hit the highway.
As a parent and I’m really scared for where my kids will go when they become teens. I don’t know where I can get help with this!
Most likely when they become teens, they will go to high school....
@ yes. Which high school coz all teachers are quitting coz it’s tough to teach.
I left industrial management to teach for 36 years, 21 as head of a high school. I never regretted it. Things became difficult with the changes brought in by Thatcher and subsequent conservative governments. We ploughed our own furrow, supporting the teachers and maintaining a community of courtesy and progress with smiles as a normal phenomenon. Since I retired, social media and electronic devices have gone side by side with draconian regulations. If the school leadership is not strong, students can swear at you or be aggressive but if you do it to them you can be fired. Perhaps this exodus of good teachers is going to cause someone to improve the situation!?
I've been teaching for 45 years. I am an introvert but I keep it to myself. I keep away from a lot of teachers because they are the most narcissistic people you'll ever meet. They are the ones who are determined to climb the administrative ladder by whatever means short of murder. I was terrified of public speaking until I read the best book with the worst title, "How to Win Friends and Influence People" by Dale Carnegie. What's wrong with the Scottish Education system? Kids just want fairness and a teacher who knows their subject, respects them without being their friend because you're not. There are no cowards in teaching. Also, dispense with woke brain washing. Ireland's education system was once excellent but is being wokified by Marxist wankers.
I keep all that woke garbage out of my classroom and tell the kids that this is "Mr. Rogers Neighborhood", and to act accordingly. If they don't know about Mr. Rogers, I teach them.
Have you thought about working in a special needs school? I found it to be very rewarding. Sure it was challenging at times. The children were not too bad. Most were quite well behaved compared to a regular school. Class sizes were small and there are support staff in the classes with you.
Entitled children growing up and having entitled children is a social disaster.
Teach online
As a software engineer I think you would be suited to software engineering and yes you can find some way of bringing your love of history into it.
Thank you for sharering your experience
I thought my dream job would be teaching English as a second language. I studied Linguistics and LOVED the theory behind language acquisition and general stuff like that. Until I actually stepped into the classroom. It was like entering a shark den. I immediately felt incredibly self-conscious and aware of everything I did, and at the end of the day, my voice hurt, and I was constantly ruminating on things I may have done wrong. I was terrified of not giving the kids a good lesson, but the energy drain was the worst. I felt mentally exhausted by the end of the day. Best of luck to you, and thanks for sharing your story.
I have been working in primary education for the last 28 years - most of them good, though my feelings of frustration and general uselessness come and go in waves. What really gets me through are those moments when you can see you make a real difference and the support of colleagues lightens the load and helps with your mental health. I really admire friends who went into secondary. I think I would have quit long ago. Dealing with teenagers would definitely push me over the edge 😂 Kudos to you. At least you tried. ❤
Teaching is the very best job in the world. I love teaching overseas. However Teaching in the UK is the worst job in the world.
The people who go into training teachers are a mixed bunch. The one I knew at Bangor, was a former primary school teacher, trying to teach people to be Secondary English Teachers. She was full of hatred against the English and bullied various English students in the class. I think she thought this immature conduct was proof of her Welsh Nationalist credentials. Her silly teenage-style tantrums, did prepare us to deal with the children in the classroom, who behaved badly, so I guess she did some actual teacher training, without meaning to.
A very informative video. One other reason for the Lithuanians no being visible any more is that many were duped into thinking they would be going to the USA for a better life. Arriving in Grimsby is not everyone’s idea of the promised land and Scotland was not always a first choice but once there they got on with it. Once settled and having the means many would have taken every opportunity to get to America.
I do not think I could be a teacher, as my #1 rule would be to eject any disruptive student from any class. I am also terrible with name-face relation plus i am an introvert, so I totally understand the issue of energy. I have respect for you for even attempting it. For me an orderly class is essential - I suffered when that was not the case when I was a kid - 45 years ago! And that was at a school and a time when this was far less tolerated. Today?
Finished 1 semester of pgde. I utterly loathe this 1 year programme so much and I've just come from my master's degree chemistry. The workload is stupidly overwhelming: assignments, assignments and even assignments during the week when we should have been studying for our exams. And already I have problems sleeping at night because of the dread of next semester, racing through my mind. It's actually putting me off becoming a chemistry teacher as a career path. When I am done with this tedious and frustrating programme, I'm off to do my phd in chemistry. Even my Scottish dad, currently in Kuwait says he's fed up with teaching as well.
I applaud these teachers speaking out on a public platform. I was lucky enough to get old and retire in 2011. Things were rough and had been rough for some time, and it sounds like they're only getting worse. We complained like crazy to everyone who would listen, which was almost no one. Everything this guy talks about is absolutely TRUE. I've decided the only way to get any real change is for the system to totally implode and reinvent everything from scratch. The implosion part will probably happen during the lunatic trump administration, part 2. The reinventing part will take decades. We will lose a generation or two who will learn almost nothing, but it appears that's already happening. We are truly in a Dark Age. Younger teachers who are leaving, and publicly and honestly explaining their reasons, are performing a service. Good luck to you in a more fulfilling life than you would ever have as a teacher.
What is your new business endeavour?
So what next?
Many Lithuanians were called "Poles" back then. Not only called by the others, but sometimes presenting themselves like "Poles" too or writing their names in Polish. It's like some Scots would present themselves "English people", based solely on a fact they speak English or live in the UK. Lithuanians and Poles share the same religion - Catholicism and lived within one Commonwealth, where the majority of Lithuanians learned Polish. What is more, sometimes their surnames were translated to Polish and written down in Polonized forms as most of the priests were coming to Lithuania from Poland and were Poles. Sometimes these priests were telling the illiterate peasants in Lithuanian villages, that "God do not understand Lithuanian", "Good Catholic must be Pole", "Those speaking dirty pagan Lithuanian speech go straight to hell", "Catholic, who speaks Polish, will go to heaven, but those hissing in pagan Lithuanian surely going to hell" (all the many of these examples are in the books and well known for historians and ethnographers). During the uprising against Russia, the proclamation to Lithuanians in Lithuania was telling: "We, Lithuanians, being good Poles, must fight Russia well". In the west Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was seen as simply "Poland". This ignorance was leading to the fact, that they were called simple "Poles" or "Russians" after emigrating to the UK or to the USA. There is an example when Lithuanian, a native of Vilnius - Felix Yaniewicz went to Edinbourg and was a well known musician there in the 19th c. A plaque to Felix Janiewicz is unveiled on 84 Great King Street, Edinburgh. He is simply known as a Pole in Scotland and the UK. Poles present him as a Pole in the UK, in various articles too. So what happened to all the Lithuanians? 🙂
Uhh, you decided you didn't want to torture minors?
Great explanation❤
What happened at Gallipoli? A young colonel named Mustafa Kemal happened! British couldn’t defeat him. Just as Brit supported Greek forces could not defeat him in Turkey’s liberation war a few years later. Gallipoli did not give you what you wanted but it gave us our hero, the saviour and revolutionist of modern Turkey. It gave us “the Father of the Turks”!
I recommend a person volunteer at a job BEFORE going to school for it.
There was nothing to be proud about concerning this conflict. Churchill was clueless as to how organised the Turks could be, and obviously all the troop ships could be seen approaching for miles across the med. So two key aspects for a successful attack were lost. I'm no historian, but I seem to remember that the Turks even put a floating barrage across the Dardanelles to block our ships, then shot them up. It was a complete mess. And to land troops under cliffs is suicide. Even if there wasn't any Turks up there, it would have been torture climbing up. Then there was the weather - roasting when they arrived, then rain and freezing in later months when they were dug in trying to survive. Then re-enforcement's arrived. The guys under fire on the hills could see the troops arrive on the coast in the distance - but they didn't come to relieve them. They were seen making camp on the beach and swimming in the sea. And to add immense insult to injury, when the survivors were evacuated in December 1915 and thought they were sailing home - the lads were told they were actually being dropped off at France - to fight in the mud. Disgraceful abuse of volunteer soldiers.
I'm in my 7th year of teaching middle school science. I'm an introvert and a profectionist. What makes me want to quit are the increasing demands, disrespectful students, long hours, constant exhaustion, and several other factors to list. It's not worth it. Education is not what it once was. It's not what it was seven years ago. I'm looking at going back to school to retool and learn new skills. What's scary is that I'm 47. I already feel like I'm facing agism.
4:45 Let me get this right... You teach history in a RANDOM chronological order?! This is so strange! How do you explain logical processes, how do you explain context that way??? How do you jump from the Great Plague to WW I?? History can only be taught in a chronological order, starting from the first humans and ending with present times. No wonder the kids don't like it. There's no opportunity to understand the essence of history - which is CONTEXT that way. When did this silly practice start in the UK? I'm sure it wasn't the case a few decades ago.
I’m deffo an introvert. Your definition of too many people = socially draining happens to me. Even when teachers speak in the staff room I lose energy. I need to unplug once in a while. I’m also a perfectionist and I’m my worst critic. But after many years of teaching I have become more aware that you gonna have good days and your gonna have mediocre days and that’s how it is
I couldn’t get into a PGCE in the UK so I went into teaching ESL and fell in love with teaching abroad. Going to the UK to teach in a primary or secondary schools would kill me. I still want to get the QTS on a AO route but would still prefer to teach in China. (The workload is huge) but at least the rent is low and you can save 75-80% of your salary. In the UK you’d be whacked out of your savings. No way to live
You could always sub! :) Although you do have to be flexible, you also can choose what job you pick up & what days you'd want to work. That could help you feel less drained, but also allow you to still help out at schools/ in the classrooms!
I am no longer enjoying teaching, but I’m 8 years from retirement. I have gotten my salary to an impressive place, and if I switch careers, I would most likely take a HUGE pay cut that I can’t afford. I really can’t leave at this point.
A major workload issue is the accountability regime imposed after1988.
I agree wholeheartedly. Changes were needed but the way it was applied was vindictive instead of being supportive. This had a very damaging effect. The Performance Management process introduced in 2000 was very good in concept but in practice some people were still tarnished with the vindictive brush. Where it was applied properly it was beneficial. That was a Labour government (David Blunkett) by the way.
Mayweather was much bigger than 1/3. 8/15 was available at the time with a few bookies
This video helped me with my class presentation so thanks
This is an excellent, really clear explanation of militarism. Thanks for taking the time to do this. :)
yes if truth be known then i would say this is a balanced analysis. Thing is what was left out was the need for capitaliism's growing markets by all countries. look at it from an economic point of view too. That curse is still with us, Putin invasion in Russia and a need for expansion.
Imagine requiring a drill sergeant. And even then...not being allowed to enforce any rules.no consequences, no standards,no support.The inmates are indeed in charge of the asylum!!!
The irony of the Scots having a problem with poor working people from Ireland coming their country to live in squalor when the Scots just two centuries earlier moved en masse ("planted") to Ireland and basically threw the Irish off their own land and enslaved them in all but name with the permission of the Crown.
I've been teaching for 6 years now and I am an introvert, a perfectionist and get really anxious with public speaking 😂 It's the worst for me after a break and the only way I get through the first couple of weeks back is by pretending I'm not me, fake it until you make it ahahaha This video has made me understand why I think of quitting so often! I empathise with everything you said and the training for me was the WORST. It's such a rewarding job, but for me it is at the expense of any social life which I don't think friends and family quite understand. It's definitely a struggle!! 😂
There are a lot of people in Glasgow with the surname Bendoris, which is an Anglicization of the Lithuanian surname Bendorious.
The choice for my Great Grandfather in Glasgow was a small wage in the dangerous (life-threatening) new industries. Living in derelict, unsanitary conditions....(Creating a collective tenement living which had its own social rules for helping the communities). OR joining the British territorial armies for a higher wage in the South African wars. He chose the latter... fortunately returning unscathed and helped John McLean in his work to help others when there was no dole, by forming the Palacerigg Peat Bogs...... Untaught about in history. My impression as an amateur history fan is that the history of GB is avoidant.
John McLean the revolutionary socialist in Glasgow was from parents who had to leave the Highlands after the 'Clearances'
Loving your videos by the way. Thank you
check out the TRANENT MASSACRE 1797... 90 years AFTER union. Check out also the Mutiny and betrayal of the Black Watch 1743. By the time of mass removal of our people leaving in the rural highlands, in1850 there would still be living memory of much of this brutality. Please dont avoid the truth of the English empire stretching beyond its border.
You didnt mention the burning of Scottish Highland homes to replace the farming community with sheep...Many burnings with elderly and infirm asleep within. Also the union was incredibly resisted ... (disruption by industry was nothing in comparison to the brutality against the Scottish from 1707 all the way through to 1900's
Utter bullshit!