Teach For America Interview Thoughts:
- they had us in the Lehman Brothers office building for the full day interview
- we sat in swanky leather chairs in a posh board room
- the two interviewers were very nice, my interviewer in particular (she took about 20 minutes to tell us all an inspirational story of what one TFA teacher accomplished with kids in the Rio Grande Valley)
- they are much more focus on the "MISSION" (all caps) of eliminating the education / socio-economic income gap than filling the teacher shortage. They actually have a lot of good to say about this, but in the end, they aren't geared toward keeping people in the classroom as teachers.
The group discussion is a joke. All you do is "blah blah blah, great idea Ms. X" and "I thought XYZ about the article, and think we should do blah blah blah." Just make sure you read your articles and participate (not too much or too little) and you'll do fine on that part.
The writing exercise might be harder for some people, but writing essays and letters is my bread and butter, so I didn't stress about that section either. Which just left the personal interview, which I also thought went very well.
Overall feeling about the TFA interview day: B+
New York City Teaching Fellows Interview Thoughts:
- we interviewed at Washington Irving HS in Union Square
- we sat at graffiti scrawled desk tops made for smaller bodies, in a room covered from floor to ceiling in brightly colored, home-made charts and graphs and student work
- the two interviewers were nice, but a bit reserved. They gave a quick "my name is x and I teach y" and that was it. No inspirational stories about the "mission" here.
The group session was almost identical to TFA's in format, though the question differed a little, of course. I actually thought NYCTF's approach to this was better, as they made you come up with actual solutions to real problems facing teachers. No esoteric pedagogy here.
The writing portion was the same. In the form of a letter (and that's all you're gettin' from me!)...
My personal interview was what tipped it for me. My interviewer Joy has been teaching "alternative" students in NYC for 12 years. She came off a bit stern and reserved throughout the day (actually, they had us there at night), so I was hoping I wouldn't get her for my personal interview. But I did...and I couldn't have been happier at the end! The interview itself went great, and I established a good rapor with her right away. What tipped the "program scales" for me was that Joy stayed late (I was the last interviewee at 9pm) and talked to me for an extra 20 minutes. She gave me the scoop and didn't hedge or paint rosie any aspect I questioned her about. She also gave me a lot of practical advice for interviewing with principals, classroom management, etc. I hope I get to meet her again some day and thank her...she really helped me to know I was in the "right place" for the right reasons.
Overall feeling about the NYCTF interview day: A-
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...and that was it. Now I just have to wait until April 19th (my honey's birthday) to find out if I got into TFA, and the beginning of May for NYCTF. I'm definitely on the fence as to which program I prefer (assuming / hoping I get into both). Anyone out there with knowledge about either or both programs??? Your input would be greatly appreciated!!
3 comments:
I work with lots of Teaching Fellows, and they say it's better than TFA, because there's more training before you get in the classroom.
Also, they tell me TFA tries to avoid special ed classes and training to keep their statistics looking better.
Good luck!
What was the outcome of your interviews? Were you accepted to both? If so, which program did you choose?
As a TFA special ed teacher, I can tell you that the first commenter is just plain wrong! TFA has developed a training program just for SpEd teachers and sends a lot of us into the classroom. The TFA summer institute is harder than the TF training because with TFA you are REQUIRED to lesson plan daily and to teach, alone, for 45 minutes per day, while with TF you may not really teach at all.
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