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* In ''Literature/OneHundredYearsAhead'', the maths teacher Nelya is TheFashionista, very young, friendly and easy-going, and at the same time, she really loves her subject and is extremely well-liked among her pupils. However, her lack of experience shows: when she discovers that Alice, a new student at the school, knows advanced mathematics, she forgets about the lesson and spends the remainder of it discussing a difficult equation with her.
* In ''Literature/AnneOfAvonlea'', Anne started her teaching career (one-room schoolhouse schoolmarm) with lots of enthusiasm and noble ideas. She would encourage every child to learn, make every child love learning, and of course never ever whip her students to punish them (19th century Canada, FYI, and by "whip" they mean whacking away at the bottom or wrists with a stick, not a literal whip. This would be a common school punishment well into the 20th century.) Of course there was one student who refused to behave or obey her because he was raised by a misogynist father. Eventually she snapped and whipped him. Of course, this made him respect her.

to:

* In ''Literature/OneHundredYearsAhead'', the maths teacher Nelya is TheFashionista, very young, friendly and easy-going, and at the same time, she really loves her subject and is extremely well-liked among her pupils. However, her lack of experience shows: when she discovers that Alice, a new student at the school, knows advanced mathematics, she forgets about the lesson and spends the remainder of it discussing a difficult equation with her.
* In ''Literature/AnneOfAvonlea'', Anne started her teaching career (one-room schoolhouse schoolmarm) with lots of enthusiasm and noble ideas. She would encourage every child to learn, make every child love learning, and of course never ever whip her students to punish them (19th century Canada, FYI, and by "whip" they mean whacking away at the bottom or wrists with a stick, not a literal whip. This would be a common school punishment well into the 20th century.) Of course there was one student who refused to behave or obey her because he was raised by a misogynist father. Eventually she snapped and whipped him. Of course, this made him respect her.



* In ''Literature/OneHundredYearsAhead'', the math teacher Nelya is TheFashionista, very young, friendly and easy-going, and at the same time, she really loves her subject and is extremely well-liked among her pupils. However, her lack of experience shows: when she discovers that Alice, a new student at the school, knows advanced mathematics, she forgets about the lesson and spends the remainder of it discussing a difficult equation with her.



* Lainey Lewis in ''Series/{{Schooled}}'' is forced back first to her hometown and then to take a junior teaching job at her old high school after her dreams of fame and fortune evaporate. To her surprise, she finds herself enjoying being a music teacher. Old hands in the teachers' lounge, many of whom remember trying to teach Lainey, are cynical about this and warn her the initial rush of enthusiasm does not last. And even Lainey finds her young colleague CB's enthusiasm for the job to be wearying. CB is a fairly new teacher who believes in relating to the kids and trying to make his lessons interesting, but the shine goes off his enthusiasm for the job when he is landed with the task of teaching sex-ed to a class full of teenage boys. In fact, a little weary cynicism starts to creep in...
%% * Kimberly Woods in Season 3 of ''Series/BostonPublic''.



* This trope is ruthlessly parodied in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YBQ5YILNGXE this]] ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' sketch featuring Creator/LinManuelMiranda as a substitute teacher for some rowdy teens. He uses every single cliche in the book--saying that Shakespeare was "the greatest rapper of all time," repeatedly claiming that he's on the kids' side and doesn't like the administration, and assuming that a quiet girl is secretly struggling with illiteracy. It turns out that he's a failed actor trying to break into teaching. The problem? The teens [[GenreSavvy know all of these tropes]]--apparently every substitute tries them--and repeatedly defuse his efforts to be cool, lamenting that they just want to ''learn'' for once. Oh, and the quiet girl isn't illiterate--she's just not talking because she's [[StunnedSilence stunned by the substitute's total failure]] ("I'm ashamed and embarrassed for you").

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%% * This trope is ruthlessly parodied Kimberly Woods in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YBQ5YILNGXE this]] ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' sketch featuring Creator/LinManuelMiranda as a substitute teacher for some rowdy teens. He uses every single cliche in the book--saying that Shakespeare was "the greatest rapper Season 3 of all time," repeatedly claiming that he's on the kids' side and doesn't like the administration, and assuming that a quiet girl is secretly struggling with illiteracy. It turns out that he's a failed actor trying to break into teaching. The problem? The teens [[GenreSavvy know all of these tropes]]--apparently every substitute tries them--and repeatedly defuse his efforts to be cool, lamenting that they just want to ''learn'' for once. Oh, and the quiet girl isn't illiterate--she's just not talking because she's [[StunnedSilence stunned by the substitute's total failure]] ("I'm ashamed and embarrassed for you").''Series/BostonPublic''.


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* Lainey Lewis in ''Series/{{Schooled}}'' is forced back first to her hometown and then to take a junior teaching job at her old high school after her dreams of fame and fortune evaporate. To her surprise, she finds herself enjoying being a music teacher. Old hands in the teachers' lounge, many of whom remember trying to teach Lainey, are cynical about this and warn her the initial rush of enthusiasm does not last. And even Lainey finds her young colleague CB's enthusiasm for the job to be wearying. CB is a fairly new teacher who believes in relating to the kids and trying to make his lessons interesting, but the shine goes off his enthusiasm for the job when he is landed with the task of teaching sex-ed to a class full of teenage boys. In fact, a little weary cynicism starts to creep in...
* This trope is ruthlessly parodied in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YBQ5YILNGXE this]] ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' sketch featuring Creator/LinManuelMiranda as a substitute teacher for some rowdy teens. He uses every single cliche in the book--saying that Shakespeare was "the greatest rapper of all time," repeatedly claiming that he's on the kids' side and doesn't like the administration, and assuming that a quiet girl is secretly struggling with illiteracy. It turns out that he's a failed actor trying to break into teaching. The problem? The teens [[GenreSavvy know all of these tropes]]--apparently every substitute tries them--and repeatedly defuse his efforts to be cool, lamenting that they just want to ''learn'' for once. Oh, and the quiet girl isn't illiterate--she's just not talking because she's [[StunnedSilence stunned by the substitute's total failure]] ("I'm ashamed and embarrassed for you").
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* ''Series/ColdCase'': The team reopens Laura [=McKinney=]'s murder case. Laura was a young, idealistic inner-city schoolteacher who joined the Teach for America program right after college. She was talented and could have any high-paying career, at least according to her father, but she saw teaching as her true passion and vocation. She wanted to make a difference, but she ended up finding resistance and problems at every turn. Her students and her fellow teachers were both extremely difficult. Sadly, she was murdered in her first year of being a teacher while trying to help one of her students whom she'd bonded with.

to:

* ''Series/ColdCase'': The In "True Calling", the team reopens Laura [=McKinney=]'s murder case. Laura was a young, idealistic inner-city schoolteacher who joined the Teach for America program right after college. She was talented and could have had any high-paying career, at least according to her father, but she saw teaching as her true passion and vocation. She wanted to make a difference, but she ended up finding resistance and problems at every turn. Her students and her fellow teachers were both extremely difficult. Sadly, she was murdered in her first year of being a teacher while trying to help one of her students whom she'd bonded with.
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* Much of the humor in ''Series/AbbottElementary'' is the contrast between idealistic and perky young 20-somethings Janine and Jacob, who have only been teaching at the titular underfunded public school for a couple years, and the more cynical and experienced older teachers Melissa and Barbara, who know from years of disappointment that the public school system will do them no favors. However, all the teachers love their students and teaching, and do their best with the resources they have.

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* Much of the humor in ''Series/AbbottElementary'' is the contrast between idealistic and perky young 20-somethings Janine and Jacob, who have only been teaching at the titular underfunded public school for a couple years, year when the series starts, and the more cynical and experienced older teachers Melissa and Barbara, who know from years of disappointment that the public school system will do them no favors. However, all the teachers love their students and teaching, and do their best with the resources they have.
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* In ''Literature/TheBridgeOfClay'' Claudia is a new literature teacher who was also assigned the role of the school counsellor. While we don't see her much in her lessons, she takes the role of the counsellor (which nobody else wanted) very earnestly and really wants to help Rudy and Clay cope with their mother's death and their father's disappearance. With Rudy she is helpless, as the only thing he wants is to drop out of school and get some serious job--but Clay appreciates her very much.

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* In ''Literature/TheBridgeOfClay'' ''Literature/BridgeOfClay'' Claudia is a new literature teacher who was also assigned the role of the school counsellor. While we don't see her much in her lessons, she takes the role of the counsellor (which nobody else wanted) very earnestly and really wants to help Rudy and Clay cope with their mother's death and their father's disappearance. With Rudy she is helpless, as the only thing he wants is to drop out of school and get some serious job--but Clay appreciates her very much.
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Spelling/grammar fix(es)


* Negi Springfield of ''Manga/NegimaMagisterNegiMagi'' is an interesting case in that he was assigned by his Magic Academy in Wales to be a teacher in Japan, and of an junior high all girls class at that. Considering he's ''ten years old'', he naturally has a boatload of enthusiasm to teach girls that are actually older than him (some of which are [[OlderThanTheyLook several times older than him]]). Thanks to being an AdorablyPrecociousChild, most of the class warms up to him immediately though it takes some time before they start taking him seriously.
* Megumi Sakura, or Megu-nee as she's called, from ''Manga/SchoolLive'' is one of these designed to resemble the SenseiChan archetype. She only recently began teaching high school. Her mother thought that she wasn't fit to be a teacher and her vice principal admonished her being too close to her students, however Megu-nee's enthusiastic and [[TeamMom caring nature]] turns out to be handy. After the ZombieApocalypse hits she becomes the sole guardian and CoolBigSis of three of her students. She also [[spoiler:commits a HeroicSacrifice [[PosthumousCharacter prior to the manga]] and saves them from zombies]].

to:

* Negi Springfield of ''Manga/NegimaMagisterNegiMagi'' is an interesting case in that he was assigned by his Magic Academy in Wales to be a teacher in Japan, and of an a junior high all girls all-girls class at that. Considering he's ''ten years old'', he naturally has a boatload of enthusiasm to teach girls that who are actually older than him (some of which are [[OlderThanTheyLook several times older than him]]). Thanks to being an AdorablyPrecociousChild, most of the class warms up to him immediately though it takes some time before they start taking him seriously.
* Megumi Sakura, or Megu-nee as she's called, from ''Manga/SchoolLive'' is one of these designed to resemble the SenseiChan archetype. She only recently began teaching high school. Her mother thought that she wasn't fit to be a teacher and her vice principal admonished her for being too close to her students, however Megu-nee's enthusiastic and [[TeamMom caring nature]] turns out to be handy. After the ZombieApocalypse hits she becomes the sole guardian and CoolBigSis of three of her students. She also [[spoiler:commits a HeroicSacrifice [[PosthumousCharacter prior to the manga]] and saves them from zombies]].



* In ''Literature/OneHundredYearsAhead'', the maths teacher Nelya is TheFashionista, very young, friendly and easy-going, and at the same time she really loves her subject and is extremely well-liked among her pupils. However, her lack of experience shows: when she discovers that Alice, a new student at the school, knows advanced mathematics, she forgets about the lesson and spends the remainder of it discussing a difficult equation with her.
* In ''Literature/AnneOfAvonlea'', Anne started her teaching career (one-room schoolhouse schoolmarm) with lots of enthusiasm and noble ideas. She would encourage every child to learn, make every child love learning, and of course never ever whip her students to punish them (19th century Canada, FYI, and by "whip" they mean whacking away at the bottom or wrists with a stick, not a literal whip. This would be a common school punishment well into the 20th century.) Of course there was one student who refused to behave or obey her because he was raised by a misogynist father. Eventually she snapped and whipped him. Of course this made him respect her.
* Mr. Benedict from ''Literature/AreYouThereGodItsMeMargaret'' is a first year sixth grade teacher. He's a well-meaning but inexperienced teacher who struggles to get his students approval.

to:

* In ''Literature/OneHundredYearsAhead'', the maths teacher Nelya is TheFashionista, very young, friendly and easy-going, and at the same time time, she really loves her subject and is extremely well-liked among her pupils. However, her lack of experience shows: when she discovers that Alice, a new student at the school, knows advanced mathematics, she forgets about the lesson and spends the remainder of it discussing a difficult equation with her.
* In ''Literature/AnneOfAvonlea'', Anne started her teaching career (one-room schoolhouse schoolmarm) with lots of enthusiasm and noble ideas. She would encourage every child to learn, make every child love learning, and of course never ever whip her students to punish them (19th century Canada, FYI, and by "whip" they mean whacking away at the bottom or wrists with a stick, not a literal whip. This would be a common school punishment well into the 20th century.) Of course there was one student who refused to behave or obey her because he was raised by a misogynist father. Eventually she snapped and whipped him. Of course course, this made him respect her.
* Mr. Benedict from ''Literature/AreYouThereGodItsMeMargaret'' is a first year first-year sixth grade teacher. He's a well-meaning but inexperienced teacher who struggles to get his students students' approval.



* Ms. Marino from ''Literature/{{Parrotfish}}'' is a first year Spanish teacher. Grady notes that she's anxious to have her students approval, so she takes to his UsefulNotes/{{transgender}}-related name change with more ease than most of his other teachers.
* ''Literature/ReignOfTheSevenSpellblades'': Most Kimberly Magic Academy teachers are some combination of {{sadist|Teacher}}ic, neglectful, or [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} crazy]]. After the first class with the new alchemy teacher, Ted Williams, in volume 4, the Sword Roses and their second-year classmates are collectively amazed that he actually taught a normal class--so much so that it makes Oliver suspicious that he's a WolfInSheepsClothing. Meanwhile Williams confesses to his old friend Luther Garland (the swordmaster) that he was scared to death he'd disappoint the kids.

to:

* Ms. Marino from ''Literature/{{Parrotfish}}'' is a first year Spanish teacher. Grady notes that she's anxious to have her students students' approval, so she takes to his UsefulNotes/{{transgender}}-related name change with more ease than most of his other teachers.
* ''Literature/ReignOfTheSevenSpellblades'': Most Kimberly Magic Academy teachers are some combination of {{sadist|Teacher}}ic, neglectful, or [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} crazy]]. After the first class with the new alchemy teacher, Ted Williams, in volume 4, the Sword Roses and their second-year classmates are collectively amazed that he actually taught a normal class--so much so that it makes Oliver suspicious that he's a WolfInSheepsClothing. Meanwhile Meanwhile, Williams confesses to his old friend Luther Garland (the swordmaster) that he was scared to death he'd disappoint the kids.



** In ''[[Recap/WarriorCatsTheRagingStorm The Raging Storm]]'', Twigbranch has just been made a mentor after becoming a warrior in the previous book. Although excited at first, she finds herself struggling with what the best way to train her apprentice is, and both mentor and apprentice become discouraged and resentful of each other. By the end of the book she comes to understand Flypaw better and plans their lessons in a way that works for them both.

to:

** In ''[[Recap/WarriorCatsTheRagingStorm The Raging Storm]]'', Twigbranch has just been made a mentor after becoming a warrior in the previous book. Although excited at first, she finds herself struggling with what the best way to train her apprentice is, and both mentor and apprentice become discouraged and resentful of each other. By the end of the book book, she comes to understand Flypaw better and plans their lessons in a way that works for them both.



* Lainey Lewis in ''Series/{{Schooled}}'' is forced back first to her home town and then to take a junior teaching job at her old high school after her dreams of fame and fortune evaporate. To her surprise, she finds herself enjoying being a music teacher. Old hands in the teachers' lounge, many of whom remember trying to teach Lainey, are cynical about this and warn her the inital rush of enthusiasm does not last. And even Lainey finds her young colleague CB's enthusiasm for the job to be wearying. CB is a fairly new teacher who believes in relating to the kids and trying to make his lessons interesting; but the shine goes off his enthusiam for the job when he is landed with the task of teaching sex-ed to a class full of teenage boys. In fact, a little weary cynicism starts to creep in...

to:

* Lainey Lewis in ''Series/{{Schooled}}'' is forced back first to her home town hometown and then to take a junior teaching job at her old high school after her dreams of fame and fortune evaporate. To her surprise, she finds herself enjoying being a music teacher. Old hands in the teachers' lounge, many of whom remember trying to teach Lainey, are cynical about this and warn her the inital initial rush of enthusiasm does not last. And even Lainey finds her young colleague CB's enthusiasm for the job to be wearying. CB is a fairly new teacher who believes in relating to the kids and trying to make his lessons interesting; interesting, but the shine goes off his enthusiam enthusiasm for the job when he is landed with the task of teaching sex-ed to a class full of teenage boys. In fact, a little weary cynicism starts to creep in...



* ''Series/BadEducation'': Alfie Wickers in an enthusiastic young teacher and strives to be positive to varying degrees of success. While some students warm up to him (with one even trying to seduce him), others can't stand his high-energy personality and ludicrous schemes. Deconstructed in the final episode, as Alfie struggles to come to terms with the fact that his first class are all moving on and will be replaced with new students. He considers quitting teaching and bursts into tears at the end of the final day, but in the end stays on as a teacher.

to:

* ''Series/BadEducation'': Alfie Wickers in is an enthusiastic young teacher and strives to be positive to varying degrees of success. While some students warm up to him (with one even trying to seduce him), others can't stand his high-energy personality and ludicrous schemes. Deconstructed in the final episode, as Alfie struggles to come to terms with the fact that his first class are all moving on and will be replaced with new students. He considers quitting teaching and bursts into tears at the end of the final day, but in the end stays on as a teacher.



* ''Series/ColdCase'': The team reopens Laura [=McKinney=]'s murder case. Laura was a young, idealistic inner-city schoolteacher who joined the Teach for America program right after college. She was talented and could have any high-paying career, at least according to her father, but she saw teaching as her true passion and vocation. She wanted to make a difference, but she ended up finding resistance and problems at every turn. Her students and her fellow teachers were both extremely difficult. Sadly, she was murdered in her first year of being a teacher while trying to help one of her students who she'd bonded with.
* In ''Series/UltramanEighty'', Takeshi Yamato, the human form of the eponymous Ultraman, takes on the job of a grade-school teacher while in civilian disguise, and for the first few episodes of the series is like this trope. More often than not his unconventional teaching methods and unorthodox style makes him the butt of plenty of jokes, and in more than one occasion he gets pranked or trolled by students.

to:

* ''Series/ColdCase'': The team reopens Laura [=McKinney=]'s murder case. Laura was a young, idealistic inner-city schoolteacher who joined the Teach for America program right after college. She was talented and could have any high-paying career, at least according to her father, but she saw teaching as her true passion and vocation. She wanted to make a difference, but she ended up finding resistance and problems at every turn. Her students and her fellow teachers were both extremely difficult. Sadly, she was murdered in her first year of being a teacher while trying to help one of her students who whom she'd bonded with.
* In ''Series/UltramanEighty'', Takeshi Yamato, the human form of the eponymous Ultraman, takes on the job of a grade-school teacher while in civilian disguise, and for the first few episodes of the series is like this trope. More often than not his unconventional teaching methods and unorthodox style makes him the butt of plenty of jokes, and in on more than one occasion he gets pranked or trolled by students.



* Anna Cordero from the podcast ''Podcast/{{SAYER}}''. An [[ArtificialIntelligence AI]] development team hires Anna, an idealistic young elementary school teacher, to come and be a mentor to their newest prototype, since all of the current members are too jaded and experienced to be good role models.

to:

* Anna Cordero from the podcast ''Podcast/{{SAYER}}''. An [[ArtificialIntelligence AI]] development team hires Anna, an idealistic young elementary school teacher, to come and be a mentor to their newest prototype, prototype since all of the current members are too jaded and experienced to be good role models.
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* In ''Anime/Danganronpa3'', Chisa Yukizome becomes the homeroom teacher of 77-B soon after her own graduation from Hope Peak's Academy. Yukizome's enthusiasm contrasts the lack of thereof of her students and she tries her best to encourage them and play part in class activities. They eventually warm up to her. Notably, Yukizome's own talent isn't being a teacher, but a housekeeper, so she often wears an apron over her suit.

to:

* In ''Anime/Danganronpa3'', Chisa Yukizome becomes the homeroom teacher of 77-B soon after her own graduation from Hope Peak's Academy. Yukizome's enthusiasm contrasts with the lack of thereof of her students and she tries her best to encourage them and play part in class activities. They eventually warm up to her. Notably, Yukizome's own talent isn't being a teacher, but a housekeeper, so she often wears an apron over her suit.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ''Series/ColdCase'': The team reopens Laura [=McKinney=]'s murder case. Laura was an idealistic young inner-city schoolteacher who joined The Teach for America program right after college. She was talented and could have any high-paying career, at least according to her father, but she saw teaching as her true passion and vocation. She wanted to make a difference, but she ended up finding resistance and problems at every turn. Her students and her fellow teachers were both extremely difficult. She was murdered in her first year of being a teacher.

to:

* ''Series/ColdCase'': The team reopens Laura [=McKinney=]'s murder case. Laura was an a young, idealistic young inner-city schoolteacher who joined The the Teach for America program right after college. She was talented and could have any high-paying career, at least according to her father, but she saw teaching as her true passion and vocation. She wanted to make a difference, but she ended up finding resistance and problems at every turn. Her students and her fellow teachers were both extremely difficult. She Sadly, she was murdered in her first year of being a teacher.teacher while trying to help one of her students who she'd bonded with.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* ''Literature/ReignOfTheSevenSpellblades'': Most Kimberly Magic Academy teachers are some combination of {{sadist|Teacher}}ic, neglectful, or [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} crazy]]. After the first class with the new alchemy teacher, Ted Williams, in volume 4, the Sword Roses and their second-year classmates are collectively amazed that he actually taught a normal class--so much so that it makes Oliver suspicious that he's a WolfInSheepsClothing. Meanwhile Williams confesses to his old friend Luther Garland (the swordmaster) that he was scared to death he'd disappoint the kids.

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