Do you groan when an on-screen educator blithely strolls out of her classroom without getting anyone to cover for her? How about when a class full of disengaged teenagers becomes inspired by a single lecture? (We鈥檙e looking at you, 鈥淒ead Poets鈥 Society.鈥)
There are dozens of tropes about teachers on film and television. While misrepresentations can lead to unrealistic expectations of the profession, it can still be fun to see how many you can find in the next episode of your favorite education-related show.
That鈥檚 why we鈥檝e created a bingo card filled with on-screen education-related clich茅s and stereotypes. We鈥檝e given you the center square as a freebie. Read below for a longer description of each trope.
Students play Cupid: Students actively (and sometimes successfully) try to set up their teachers.
Savior teacher: Idealistic (and often white) teacher easily inspires low-performing students who no one else taught effectively.
One-conversation turnaround: Student underperforming or acting up in class? One sincere talk after class will fix it.
One teacher, one classroom: Paraeducators? Interventionists? Never! Teachers only work solo.
Scary librarian: Her main job is hushing.
Angry coach: The P.E. teacher came straight from boot camp.
Absenteeism warrior: If one student is absent, the teacher will track them down like a police detective.
Secret genius: Any student with disabilities is also a savant.
Helicopter parents: Involved parents are a bossy pain.
Washed-up teacher: Lazy and jaded, this teacher does not care at all about students.
Loveable class clown: The misbehaving student is secretly the teacher鈥檚 favorite, and their disruptions are purely entertaining.
Whipping boy/girl: Every teacher hates and picks on one kid in class.
Inspirational speech: Any subject, from English literature to chemistry, is taught through passionate lectures.
Dumping ground: A single class holds all the 鈥渨orst鈥 students.
Teacher on phone during class: Usually the class runs wild while the teacher is distracted.
鈥淪chooling鈥 the teacher: Student knows more about any given subject than the teacher and puts the teacher in his or her place, usually to applause from the class.
Quiet class: Seriously, no one moves. Are they studious, terrified, or drugged?
Teacher with a briefcase: Setting a briefcase on a desk gets the attention of an entire noisy class.
Unsupervised: Teachers walk out of their classes without notice.
Class size <15: Tiny classes, even in large urban schools.
Surprised by the bell: The bell always rings after an impassioned speech, or in the middle of a harried lesson.
Lesson plan? What lesson plan?: Teachers come up with brilliant lessons off the top of their heads.
Hot for teacher: Teachers are treated as sex objects or behave overly familiar with a student.
Apple on desk: The ever-present accessory.
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