write any 10 lines on school teachers qualities telling to someone example In our school, teacher encourages us
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Teachers Are Role Models

A role model is a person who inspires and encourages us to strive for greatness, live to our fullest potential and see the best in ourselves. A role model is someone we admire and someone we aspire to be like. We learn through them, through their commitment to excellence and through their ability to make us realize our own personal growth. We look to them for advice and guidance.
A role model can be anybody: a parent, a sibling, a friend but some of our most influential and life-changing role models are teachers.
My Teacher, My Hero
When you think of the type of teacher you'd like to be, who comes to mind? The math teacher that helped you conquer fractions? The English teacher who wrote great comments on your stories? The teacher that helped you discover a new sport, hobby, talent--or maybe even nudged you down your current career path?
Those are the teachers we're celebrating through our YouTube channel, My Teacher, My Hero External link . Together, we're paying homage to the teachers that have played such an integral part in shaping our lives, and to their importance in shaping the next generation of educators.
“When the student is ready, the teacher appears.” — Marlene Canter, My Teacher My Hero
Teachers follow students through each pivotal stage of development. At six to eight hours a day, five days a week, you as a teacher are poised to become one of the most influential people in your students’ life. After their parents, children will first learn from you, their elementary school teacher. Then, as a middle school teacher, you will guide students through yet another important transition: adolescence. As children become young adults, learning throughout middle school and into high school, you will answer their questions, listen to their problems and teach them about this new phase of their lives. You not only watch your students grow you help them grow.
“We think of teacher-heroes that taught us the academics but we don’t often think of those teachers that taught us life’s lessons.” — Maria Wale, My Teacher My Hero External link
Much of what students learn from their greatest teachers is not detailed on a syllabus. Teachers who help us grow as people are responsible for imparting some of life’s most important lessons. During their initial school years, students encounter, perhaps for the first time, other children of the same age and begin to form some of their first friendships. As a teacher, you will show your students how to become independent and form their own relationships, you will carefully guide them and intervene when necessary. School is as much a place of social learning as academic learning, and this is true, not only in our early years of education, but all the way through college. Armed with a supportive and well-educated administration, there is no limit to the influence a teacher can have on one, or many, students' lives. Though a teacher’s influence on the social sphere of school lessens as students mature, those early lessons still have an effect on how they will interact with others in the future.
Teachers are founts of experience. They have already been where their students are going, undergone what they will go through and are in a position to pass along lessons, not only regarding subject matter, but lessons on life.
Meet Great Teachers
Teach.com has been speaking with award-winning teachers from across the country to hear their stories and, hopefully, find out a bit about what it is exactly that makes them great. If you are currently a teacher or thinking about becoming a teacher, take a look at some of the Teacher Profiles below to learn a bit more about what can make a teacher great.
Valerie Kibler, High School English and Journalism
Lynne Kesselman, High School Computer Technology
Dr. David Lazerson, "Dr. Laz", Special Education
Dr. Penny Ferguson, 11th grade English
Lisa Wells, Early Childhood Education
Genein Letford, Elementary School Music
Debra Rose Howell, 4th, 5th and 6th grade -- Multiage Education
Susan Evans, Kindergarten
Menu
Teachers Are Role Models

A role model is a person who inspires and encourages us to strive for greatness, live to our fullest potential and see the best in ourselves. A role model is someone we admire and someone we aspire to be like. We learn through them, through their commitment to excellence and through their ability to make us realize our own personal growth. We look to them for advice and guidance.
A role model can be anybody: a parent, a sibling, a friend but some of our most influential and life-changing role models are teachers.
My Teacher, My Hero
When you think of the type of teacher you'd like to be, who comes to mind? The math teacher that helped you conquer fractions? The English teacher who wrote great comments on your stories? The teacher that helped you discover a new sport, hobby, talent--or maybe even nudged you down your current career path?
Those are the teachers we're celebrating through our YouTube channel, My Teacher, My Hero External link . Together, we're paying homage to the teachers that have played such an integral part in shaping our lives, and to their importance in shaping the next generation of educators.
“When the student is ready, the teacher appears.” — Marlene Canter, My Teacher My Hero
Teachers follow students through each pivotal stage of development. At six to eight hours a day, five days a week, you as a teacher are poised to become one of the most influential people in your students’ life. After their parents, children will first learn from you, their elementary school teacher. Then, as a middle school teacher, you will guide students through yet another important transition: adolescence. As children become young adults, learning throughout middle school and into high school, you will answer their questions, listen to their problems and teach them about this new phase of their lives. You not only watch your students grow you help them grow.
“We think of teacher-heroes that taught us the academics but we don’t often think of those teachers that taught us life’s lessons.” — Maria Wale, My Teacher My Hero External link
Much of what students learn from their greatest teachers is not detailed on a syllabus. Teachers who help us grow as people are responsible for imparting some of life’s most important lessons. During their initial school years, students encounter, perhaps for the first time, other children of the same age and begin to form some of their first friendships. As a teacher, you will show your students how to become independent and form their own relationships, you will carefully guide them and intervene when necessary. School is as much a place of social learning as academic learning, and this is true, not only in our early years of education, but all the way through college. Armed with a supportive and well-educated administration, there is no limit to the influence a teacher can have on one, or many, students' lives. Though a teacher’s influence on the social sphere of school lessens as students mature, those early lessons still have an effect on how they will interact with others in the future.
Teachers are founts of experience. They have already been where their students are going, undergone what they will go through and are in a position to pass along lessons, not only regarding subject matter, but lessons on life.
Meet Great Teachers
Teach.com has been speaking with award-winning teachers from across the country to hear their stories and, hopefully, find out a bit about what it is exactly that makes them great. If you are currently a teacher or thinking about becoming a teacher, take a look at some of the Teacher Profiles below to learn a bit more about what can make a teacher great.
Valerie Kibler, High School English and Journalism
Lynne Kesselman, High School Computer Technology
Dr. David Lazerson, "Dr. Laz", Special Education
Dr. Penny Ferguson, 11th grade English
Lisa Wells, Early Childhood Education
Genein Letford, Elementary School Music
Debra Rose Howell, 4th, 5th and 6th grade -- Multiage Education
Susan Evans, Kindergarten
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ANSWER
SCHOOL TEACHER QUALITIES
1) FIRST AND IMP QUALITY TEACHER MUST BE A EXPERT IN TEACHING
2) TEACHER SHOULD GIVE SAME VALUE OR EDUCATION TO ALL STUDENT COMPARISON NOT ALLOW
3) TEACHER SHOULD DISCUSS ALL CONCEPT CLEARLY AND FRIENDLY TO ALL STUDENTS
4)TEACHER SHOULD BE FRIENDLY WITH STUDENTS
5) TEACHER SHOULD BE GIVE EQUAL WEIGHT AGE IN ALL ACTIVITIES
6) TEACHER SHOULD GIVE HOMEWORK TO STUDENT'S AND SHOULD CHECK IT ON PROPER TIMMING
7) WHEN WE LEFT OUR SCHOOL TEACHER SHOULD BE ALLWAYS ON OUR MIND IN BRAIN TELL A LAST MOVEMENT
8)TEACHER SHOULD BE SOME NOT MORE BUT SMALLY FAMILIAR TO STUDENT
9) TEACHER SHOULD BE A GREAT PERSON IN ALL WAYS
10) TEACHER SHOULD BE STRICTLY IN PERFECT SITUATION
I HOPE THIS INFO HELPS U ☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️
ABOVE INFO IS SUFFICIENT FOR U ☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️
SCHOOL TEACHER QUALITIES
1) FIRST AND IMP QUALITY TEACHER MUST BE A EXPERT IN TEACHING
2) TEACHER SHOULD GIVE SAME VALUE OR EDUCATION TO ALL STUDENT COMPARISON NOT ALLOW
3) TEACHER SHOULD DISCUSS ALL CONCEPT CLEARLY AND FRIENDLY TO ALL STUDENTS
4)TEACHER SHOULD BE FRIENDLY WITH STUDENTS
5) TEACHER SHOULD BE GIVE EQUAL WEIGHT AGE IN ALL ACTIVITIES
6) TEACHER SHOULD GIVE HOMEWORK TO STUDENT'S AND SHOULD CHECK IT ON PROPER TIMMING
7) WHEN WE LEFT OUR SCHOOL TEACHER SHOULD BE ALLWAYS ON OUR MIND IN BRAIN TELL A LAST MOVEMENT
8)TEACHER SHOULD BE SOME NOT MORE BUT SMALLY FAMILIAR TO STUDENT
9) TEACHER SHOULD BE A GREAT PERSON IN ALL WAYS
10) TEACHER SHOULD BE STRICTLY IN PERFECT SITUATION
I HOPE THIS INFO HELPS U ☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️
ABOVE INFO IS SUFFICIENT FOR U ☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️
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