Starting Honest Conversations as a Former Educator
For those of you that have been following along, I just started an account with both Medium and Substack to try to push myself to write a bit more and reflect a bit more… so hopefully you will be seeing more of me, but if you have accounts there, would love some support there to keep me accountable.
To kickoff these new spaces, I wanted to re-introduce myself..
Hello everyone, my name is Ted Kim and I am a former educator and technology coordinator, now working in product management at an early stage, EdTech startup in Artificial Intelligence (AI).
Beginnings are hard.
My very first official post begins with me staring at the recommended statement above, realizing that it holds a meaning far deeper than simply how I feel about creating this space.
Beginnings are truly hard. This is how I feel about most things, but leaving the classroom led me into so many “beginnings” all at once.
New career, new industry (kind of), new city, new apartment, new friends… the list continues, but the reason I felt compelled to begin here of all places through writing, really started from a strong sense of feeling lost. Not lost from a what am I doing perspective, nor from a fulfillment perspective, but a deep seeded anxiousness that felt familiar from my time working in the classroom. A good friend of mine told me that working in Product Management is lonely, and similarly, I have made so many connections to that same loneliness I felt as an educator.
In the past couple years working outside of the classroom, but still with classrooms, I found that there are so many lessons I have learned, but also so many great conversations and topics that I want to reflect upon. Difficult and challenging topics that really test my understanding of the education industry and the impact I want to have.
Ultimately, I hope that as I continue to reflect and share through writing, that we can help create a space to process and discuss all that is happening at the junction between education and technology. Additionally, I have met many transitioning educators that I want to bring validation to all the ways my skills as an educator have translated into the work that I do presently.
I currently hope to write minimally biweekly, and would love to hear from you all any questions, preferred formats, frequency, and all things feedback related. I will be the first to admit that I by no means have all the answers, but am nonetheless curious in trying to understand the world around me for all the new beginnings yet to come. This is our space now, thanks for keeping me company.