Vocabulary that Won’t Be on the Test: : Some Potentially Useful Professional Lingo
May 26, 2022
May 26, 2022
Here are a few words that you may find useful and may want to make part of your professional lingo, courtesy of GCFL.net:
Bookstache: The facial hair added by students to every portrait in the American history textbook.
Colate: Two students who arrive tardy to class at the same time.
Corroborative learning: When all the students in a class agree to stick to the same excuse for why their work is not done.
Digital disorganizers: Fascinating electronic organizers that distract students from paying attention to assignments, instructions, and due dates.
Erasivot: The divot that you get in your paper if you erase too hard.
Handoubt: To wonder if the students even looked at the important papers you just passed out to them.
Hydropendent: Student who requests permission to get a drink of water every 10 minutes.
Interconversations: The office conversations you overhear when someone forgets to turn off the intercom after an announcement.
McDone: Students unable to participate in the afternoon’s learning activities because they consumed large amounts of fast food for lunch.
Meview: A class review of material in which the only one really reviewing is the teacher.
Multiple unintelligences: A variety of ways of not knowing something. Includes, but is not limited to: resistive unintelligence, disinterested unintelligence, distracted unintelligence, unconscious unintelligence, and absent unintelligence.
Plausea: The queasy feeling a teacher gets while trying to figure out if a student’s excuse is believable or not.
Powerpointless: A wonderfully executed, high tech presentation completely devoid of meaningful content.
Repedementia: Repeatedly telling the same joke to the same class because you can’t remember which of your classes you’ve told it to.
Seatables: The little pieces of school lunch that hide on the seats of school lunchroom chairs waiting to adhere to the next unsuspecting sitter.
Signotsure: The signature that comes back on a midterm report that looks more like the student’s than the parent’s.
Strobed: The feeling you have after spending all day in a classroom with florescent lights that do that flicker thing.
Teacherscreen: The student who stands in front of you to purposefully block your view of the rest of the class as he asks you a question.
Telesubbies: Substitute teachers who only show videos.
Torigami: Assignment papers folded and unfolded so many times that they are turned in as sixteen separate pieces.
Vistamized: A student so fascinated with the view from the classroom window that he has completely lost touch with what’s going on inside the classroom.
Wired classroom: Any classroom in which the teacher has had more than five cups of coffee and each student has had more than two cans of Mountain Dew.
The average pay of Virginia public school teachers in 2023-24 was $65,830. That is $4,260 below the national average of $70,090.
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