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| Guru ![]() Join Date: Jul 2007 Occupation: Teach, Study, Get Paid - Will-Excel In-China TESOL Diploma Program Location: ![]()
Posts: 64
![]() | Dress for Success The following article is part 4 of a series of articles being posted by my colleagues and I at Will-Excel TESOL. Dress for Success It would be nice if we lived in a world where appearance didn’t matter. However, that’s not the case. Appearance matters a great deal in pretty much everything we do in life. I’ve seen many new teachers, recently out of school, asking the question, “Why do I have to dress well for class?” They frequently qualify this by saying that they don’t feel comfortable in certain clothes and therefore they can’t teach as well as they would be able to without following a dress code. Young teachers often have the greatest problems with people taking them seriously and treating them with respect. Yet they are frequently the ones that resist a dress code the most. What these teachers fail to grasp is that teaching is a profession and more than that, it’s a profession in which you are directly in front of customers. By dressing as a professional everyone will be more inclined to treat you as a professional. I worked for a time for IBM and regardless of what kind of office job you had, men were expected to dress in a shirt and tie and women in similar level of professional dress. Some could argue that computer programmers, who never see a customer, should be able to wear whatever they like. Some computer companies follow this rule and often have a separate floor or building for the “geeks” to work in so that customers never see them. IBM’s policy was that each and every staff person is a professional and the clothes that they wear to work play an important role in shaping their mindset. That is, I’m dressed professionally and I should act professionally. I’ve been working in China since 1994 and have had teachers working for me since 1997. In every single case, the teachers who received the highest student evaluations were also the ones that dressed the most professionally. Sure there were teachers that students liked because they were fun in class and were good teachers but they still did not receive the highest evaluation scores. Students feel that a professional looking teacher deserves more respect and this translates into higher evaluation scores. This is true for adults as well of children of all ages. Of course there is an aspect of “chicken or the egg” in looking at student evaluations. Teachers that dress professionally tend to be more professional in other ways too, such as preparing better for class, continuing to learn new things to help with their job, volunteering to work on projects that improve the school, etc. Is it possible for a teacher to be professional in all the other ways and still not dress professionally? Of course it is. But why not be perceived as professional as well as being professional? First impressions count and always will so take advantage of this bias that people have. Looking the part of a professional teacher will go a long way towards getting other people to treat you with respect. This applies to your students, their parents, your coworkers, and your managers.
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| ESL Rookie ![]() | Re: Dress for Success Surely schools have a workplace health and safety or dress code they must abide by. No flip flops, crocs of slippers etc. Enclosed shoes and collared shirts are the basics if I remember. This does not entitle them to dress up like a clown (mis-match clothes). It still happens at school. One question but, are teachers allowed to wear brand clothes? Your Ralph Laurens, Gants etc, while at the same time keeping to the professional dress code? Jeans? Sneakers? Keeping it short, fashion trends. Is this allowed? |
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| Moderator ![]() Join Date: Jun 2005 Occupation: ESL Teacher Location: ![]()
Posts: 119
![]() | Re: Dress for Success Yeh, I don't know why though anyone would want to wear their best brand clothes when teaching, only to have kids jump on you with their grotty little hands. Nothing wrong wearing brand clothes to work if that's your style.
__________________ English Teacher Guru ! Ask me a question, and I'll see if I can help. |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Junior Member ![]() Join Date: Oct 2007 Occupation: english teacher Location: ![]()
Posts: 8
![]() | Re: Dress for Success did you write this or are you simply passing it on? I ask because even though I understand that the word "geek" is frequently used to refer to the brainy engineer/computer programmer types, I feel that in this case it sounds out of context - seeing as though the entire article is about being "professional" and this does not sound at all professional. It is not a very nice term and people can feel offended by it. Other than that, I think this article makes a lot of sense, appearances are very important in almost every context. |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| Wannabe Guru ![]() Join Date: Oct 2005 Occupation: Teacher Location: ![]()
Posts: 34
![]() | Re: Dress for Success Yeh, I too don't like the term "geek". It's a stereotype that shouldn't exist. I have worked in an IT department, and let me tell you that some of the guys in that department are very cool and fun to hang around with. On the floor of over 50 IT staff, there was not one "geek" so to call it. |
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