The Transformation from Student to TeacherIs there a transformation from student to teacher? The nature of a student is to learn to develop skills that help him solve everyday problems. Later in their school career they will begin to develop more advanced skills. Skills that will be used to help other students perform tasks to help the community, such as building bridges, teaching, networking in an office building, and so on. After you have acquired an important role in society and are able to perform its task flawlessly, you begin to teach others the same knowledge you have acquired. One reason is because you have performed that duty long enough to teach others how to do it correctly and in the precise ways, but at the same time you are still a student. Mainly because the world today has raised its standards and increased safety laws. During your teaching period, your methods are becoming extinct and you are forced to increase your knowledge of newer and safer ways so that your students have the newest and most up-to-date knowledge of the topic. Some of the greatest are also the greatest students. My science teacher during high school was one of my favorite teachers. He knew how to bring his knowledge to life. Throughout high school I always took one of his science courses. She had been teaching for at least fifteen years before I became one of her students, and she was still a student in college. He was working on his doctrine in physics. She was a very intelligent teacher and played a big role in wanting to become a teacher. If it weren't for education, the world would be out of order and disorganized, which would make things difficult for everyone. If teachers were unable to overcome obstacles and did not have the nature to help others, the world would be filled with ignorance and total chaos. As a teacher I would use a number of different philosophies if the class.
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