Teachers across Canada are turning to social media platform TikTok to share everything from their daily experiences to learning tips and even their classroom outfits. As part of the wider online community known as TeacherTok, some of them have amassed a following that extends beyond the classroom.
The Canadian Press talked to three Canadian teachers, whose TikTok videos have collectively reached millions of views, about how they balance professionalism, privacy and addressing misconceptions about their jobs.
Julia Adams, a Windsor, Ont.-based occasional teacher qualified to work in both elementary and high schools, said TeacherTok allows educators to showcase their day-to-day life, connect with other teachers and help people better understand what they do.
“I think a lot of people have a lot of misconceptions about what it’s actually like to be a teacher,” said Adams, who has more than 51,000 TikTok followers under the username @juliaa_adams.
Adams, an artist who aspires to be a full-time art teacher, said posting online allows teachers with similar lived experiences to share advice and help navigate various situations.
“You can figure out where to go from here and realize that you’re not so alone because teaching can be a very lonely profession.”
The 29-year-old describes teachers as “ever-revolving doors.”
We put on multiple hats a day. You’re a social worker one second and now you’re a problem solver. Now I’m just gonna be a teacher. But then I also have to be a therapist and a nurse sometimes,” she said. “It’s just very quick paced so there’s a whole bunch of things that happen even in the matter of five minutes.”
For Thanksgiving, Adams posted a “gratitude tree” she created at her school, which got more than 600,000 views on TikTok and became one of her most viral videos. The activity involved putting up paper leaves and asking students to write something they are grateful for, creating a tree display at the front of the school.
“I got comments saying, ‘Oh I’m gonna show this to my principal,’ ‘This is a great idea,”’ she said.
Adams also posts videos reacting to other teachers’ fashion choices, discussing pranks on her students and how she decorates her classroom. Going for a “very generalized approach,” Adams doesn’t record her students or mention their names and pronouns when she talks about them.
“I always make sure that I’m staying professional because it’s a public forum. You never know who’s gonna come across your videos.”
Margaret Fong, 36, said her approach to TikTok is “being very candid and almost vulnerable to the sense of sharing what it’s like to be a teacher.”
“It’s sharing our experiences: our wins, our challenges and next steps of what we can do to be better in the classroom and as people as well,” said Fong, who has been teaching elementary school for 12 years in Toronto.
Fong said teaching is her calling, which inspired her online handle @mycalltoteach. She has more than 13,000 TikTok followers.