I have been teaching science for 9 years and I have to tell you, the first year is the worst! I promise you, with time it will get better.
Even now, I have days where I struggle with the time management. No matter what, you will always have those days that seem never to end and you have paper-monster that you think that you think you have no chance of taming. Or that it is a full moon because the kids are driving you nuts. However, I have a few things that have helped me and maybe, they will help you.
- One name: Harry Wong. I have found that he has been a godsend in terms of classroom management. His book has amazing ideas (For example, don't set classroom rules, instead set expectations. Why? Well, expectations are made to be met, while rules are made to be broken.) If you can't find the book (or aren't sure that it would work), I would check out teachers.net and look at his column that he has over there with his wife.
- Procedures are your friend. I find that most of the problems that come up in my classroom are due to lack of procedures. I have found that kids love routines and as a result, I have set up procedures for them regarding anything they might want to do. Go to bathroom? There's a procedure for that. Sharpen a pencil? There's a procedure for that. Need a tissue? Handing in late work? Have trouble with a problem? Procedure, procedure, procedure. If you Google "aft procedure pfd" a great worksheet for working out your classroom procedures will come up. Spend a little time figuring out what the procedure is for each of those items (your school might have something in place already). Then, review this with your students over and over again. I actually quiz my students on this a couple times during the first quarter. A little time spent on this will make a much smoother running classroom.
- Time management is key so you don't go on overload and burn out. I have tried a few things in place so I don't go too crazy. For starters, I never ever bring papers home to be graded. Instead, I try to get to school 45 minutes early and use the time before school to grade. Additionally, I take 15-30 minutes before I go home to set up for the next day. (That way, in the event that I get stuck in traffic or I'm out sick, everything is set up and ready to go.) I also try to get all my work outfits together on Sunday (clean, ironed) so I don't have to worry about that in the morning during the week. I also get up early on Saturday (like a work day) and use this time to plan and make handouts (or find them on the Internet). This 'plan at home, grade at work" model really has helped me big time. I also use Google calendar to help me plan everything out and I share it with my family - so I don't plan big school things around big family things and vice versa.
- Avoid negative people - this might even mean avoiding the teachers' lounge. Usually when I am around negative people, they make me negative and become a big energy suck. If I stay positive, I am much more productive and in a much better teacher for my students.
- People have mentioned a lot of great websites. Check out enchanted learning (you might have to pay, but they have ideas). As my mentor told me - beg, borrow, or steal great teaching lessons/ideas. Also, realize that not every lesson is going to be wonderful. Many, many will be duds. It will not be like the movies. If you can create one great lesson every year, by the end of your career you will have 40 weeks of wonderful lessons! (Assuming you are 22 and teach until you are 62)
- Take time for yourself. Even if you are only getting your nails done once a week, having a special date night with hubby, or going to the gym - do something for yourself so you aren't one of the 50% of those who leave the teaching profession in the first 5 years.
Good luck. I promise - it does get better.