sábado, 18 de julio de 2026

Charter and Private Schools

Teachers who have taught in a charter or private school what has your experience been like?

Have you taught in a public school? If so, how is it better or worse than public schools?

What is your pay like?

What are the students like behavior wise?

How is your funding for the school and for the classrooms?

What state is your school located in?

My first job was a charter school and it was not a good experience. However, I know that charter and private school experiences vary. So I'm curious to know.



Submitted July 18, 2026 at 12:13PM by No-Common7872 https://ift.tt/gVTCMqX

after BMLT course...?

after BMLT course...?

Career guidance for a BMLT graduate from a small town—Job vs. Higher Studies?

Hi everyone, my sister recently completed her BMLT (Bachelor of Medical Laboratory Technology) and we are currently at a crossroads regarding her next steps.👣

We are from Mandla, a small town in Madhya Pradesh, where job opportunities in this field are very limited.

Her Current Situation:💭

🔽***Option*** 1:

Start Working (Job): Is it better to relocate to a larger city (like Indore/Bhopal) for a Medical Lab Technician/Phlebotomist role to gain hands-on experience? Does starting in a private diagnostic chain help with long-term career growth?

🔽***Option*** 2:

Higher Education: If she pursues an M.Sc. (MLT or related), how does the admission process work? Is there a central "common" entrance exam (like CUET PG) for top colleges, or do we need to target specific university-level exams?

Any advice, tips, or experiences you can share would be incredibly helpful for her career journey. Thank you so much!😭🙏🏻



Submitted July 18, 2026 at 07:26AM by DarkInternational797 https://ift.tt/O19Nk2z

Sonam wangchuk

Sonam Wangchuk’s protest isn’t politics—it’s a wake-up call. When millions of students face exam leaks and uncertainty, silence from leadership becomes the real issue. Accountability in education isn’t optional—it’s essential. Reform the system, restore trust. #Educationreform #StudentsFirst #educationminister



Submitted July 18, 2026 at 06:14AM by Abneesh-Thakur-08 https://ift.tt/b7968nW

DPU is the worst university

No text found

Submitted July 18, 2026 at 02:11AM by ConversationFar9296 https://ift.tt/yDeWjvO

viernes, 17 de julio de 2026

Seeking Advice

Hello, I'll try to summarize.

Basically, I'm 18 now. I struggle really really hard to pay attention because of a pretty severe amount of ADHD. My mom would usually artificially manage this stuff by sitting next to me 24/7 and helping me out personally + some medication that didn't help as much as I really would've preferred, but I was 13 or whatever so it took me ages to ever realize it wasn't doing it so I could swap.

Okay, fast forward to today. I failed a lot of things in high school. Due to circumstances, my mom has pretty much no intention to help me anymore, and obviously 'im an adult i should be able to do this' so.. I'm trying to pull it all together.

I got very, very depressed and failed many classes in my college prep school. It was a wonderful track I completely let slip through my fingers because I was 14-16, but so miserable and inattentive I couldn't work. I want to make things work again. I am now in a virtual school, in a program where I'm basically homeschooled.

I really want to find a way to get my high school diploma. I've heard it's more beneficial than a GED or homeschool diploma and I really want to find a way to get into some sort of higher education. I don't have a particular goal in mind as I've been so exhausted and I have an immunocompromised family member + a very young sibling (mom immuncompromised as my brother was born during COVID) and I have spent so many years inside, I don't know what I can even do with myself.

I've recently pretty much all but finished my 11th grade requirements, but I unfortunately just barely missed the ability to start the full time virtual school that's available. Now I'm stuck feeling like.. "What should I do now?"

I mainly came here to ask for suggestions, but also if I could possibly do half of the 12th grade stuff in homeschooling and then transfer into fulltime halfway, would this achieve me the diploma I seek?

Any thoughts welcome.



Submitted July 17, 2026 at 11:01PM by zornography1 https://ift.tt/D0aOyXt

Should I study psychology, linguistics, law or physical therapy?

I am an American studying in Poland. I have completed my first year of study at Music University though I decided I want to add a second major to have more stability in the future. I got accepted for English-German linguistics, psychology and law for regular studies with the option of studying physical therapy on weekends (for which I would unfortunately have to pay).

I am much better in humanities than STEM and my Polish is fluent but I don't understand some more complicated words. Law is probably the most prestigious but I'm not sure if I would be good in it and if I want to be a lawyer. Psychology is interesting but I'm not sure if it will lead to a job. Physical therapy is probably the most practical as far as finding a job and it won't conflict with my music degree since it's on weekends, but I'm not good at STEM and unfortunately I would have to pay a lot of money for it.

I appreciate any advice. I need to make a decision in a few days. Thank you!



Submitted July 17, 2026 at 11:30AM by Sudden_Ad_2567 https://ift.tt/iBgejOm

handwriting is quietly disappearing and kids hands literally hurt when they write

Been paying attention to this for a while and it feels like something shifted. Kids who are otherwise sharp, good readers, decent at math, just cannot write legibly or sustain it for any stretch of time without complaining their hand hurts. Like physically holding a pencil feels foreign to them.

Part of me gets it. Tablets and keyboards from age three, touch screens before they could spell their own name. The muscle memory that used to build up naturally just doesn't get built anymore.

What bugs me is that schools keep adding more screen time as a solution to engagement problems, and handwriting practice gets quietly dropped because it feels old fashioned or low priority. Nobody makes a big announcement about it. It just disappears from the schedule.

There's also a decent chunk of research connecting handwriting to memory retention and notetaking quality, so this isn't purely a nostalgia thing. If students can't physically write comfortably, it affects how they process and record information during class.

Curious if this is showing up in other schools or if it's more localized. And whether anyone has actually pushed back on reducing handwriting instruction or found a way to keep it in without it feeling like punishment to the kids.



Submitted July 17, 2026 at 05:29AM by WickedKing94 https://ift.tt/zjINE6B