Many people have asked me these questions. I'm telling you now, I'm a teacher in an orphanage by profession. My students are all children abandoned by their parents. Because of such defects, they were cruelly abandoned by their parents at a very young age. Because they are disabled children, those public schools in society are reluctant to recruit. Therefore, they have to study and grow up in orphanages until they grow up.
Although I have a teacher qualification certificate and work as a teacher, I don't enjoy the treatment of teachers. I don't have winter and summer vacations. I don't celebrate Teachers' Day. I have the title of teacher, which was evaluated in the original unit. I have taught in an orphanage for more than 20 years, and now I have a promotion title. I have always enjoyed the salary of assistant level in public institutions.
Looking at my students and thinking about my work, when the 33rd Teacher's Day comes, I want to say a few words to myself:
1 always remember what the old dean said to himself and treat those orphans as their own children.
I was transferred from a public school to an orphanage on 1996 to engage in educational work. Time flies like a white horse. More than 20 years have passed quickly. I still remember when I first reported to the orphanage, a teenage boy with mental retardation stood at the gate and looked at me with a giggle. I was so scared that I hurried to the dean's office.
Dean comforted me, "don't be afraid. Although a little silly, they are all very kind and will not attack people. His smile at you is a sign of his friendliness to you. " Hearing this, my heart hung up. "They are all poor, and they are all children that parents don't want. Therefore, the staff of our hospital should love them as much as their parents, so that they can feel that although their biological parents abandoned them, the country did not abandon them, so that they can feel the warmth of the social family! This is our purpose. " This is what our old dean said to me on my first day in the welfare home. I have always kept this sentence in mind. And I have been practicing this sentence, and I think I will keep practicing it.
Don't compare treatment with teachers in society.
I have a teacher qualification certificate, and I do teacher work. But I don't have winter and summer vacations. I don't celebrate Teachers' Day. I have been in a welfare home for more than 20 years and have never been with a teacher in a public school. I feel like I'm doing charity I gave my love to those orphans and disabled children. Seeing their happy smiles makes my heart warm. I don't think every teacher can feel this warmth.
Don't compare your work with other colleagues in the unit.
Most of my colleagues who work in our welfare home are sitting in their offices, drinking tea and chatting and reading newspapers for half a day. Only another colleague and I are dealing with children on the front line. Sometimes I can't learn three numbers in half a month. If you teach a children's song in March, only one child can sing it, and the other children will just do nothing and never understand what you are talking about. Our love is patient to the extreme. When we are anxious, we will comfort ourselves when we see other employees drinking tea and chatting leisurely in the office: a unit will always have different division of labor, and someone will always do the work.
Take care of the family and children while doing the necessary work.
Family is the foundation of all undertakings, and a happy family is the source of work. The healthy growth of children is the cornerstone of family happiness. So in the future, we should not only work hard, but also take good care of our families and children.
Many caring people came to the orphanage to express their love for send warm. They all say that our work is hard, a respectable profession and a great profession. I feel that we are not as great as they say, just trying our best to educate those orphans.
(1) How to fill in the study and education form?
Learning form:
First, full-time
Second, amateur classes
Third, the coll