NEA - National Education Association

07/18/2024 | News release | Archived content

Exploring the World of Teachers on TikTok

One teacher influencer on TikTok, Amanda Ramirez or @amandamonroee, started out as an aspiring teacher who enjoyed watching videos about the profession. She is going into her third year of teaching 4thgrade in the Phoenix area. The videos Ramirez watched gave her invaluable guidance on how to run her future classroom. this, she decided she also wanted to make a positive contribution on the app.

"Once I was starting to graduate, I knew I wanted to also create content focused on teaching just because I knew how much it was helpful to me being able to get advice from other teachers, and I want to do the same based on my own experiences," Ramirez said.

Today, Ramirez has about 34,000 followers on the app, many of whom message her about her impact on their lives. Ramirez said that with so much negativity online about the teaching profession, she believes it is important that there is a corner of the internet that teachers can go to that uplifts them.

"You can post videos all day long, but what's important is building a community, and especially within the teacher profession," Ramirez said. "I think we all need each other so supporting each other and engaging, either through comments or direct messages, it's important because you feel connected to those people."

Sharing Authenticity

Hawk said that she makes sure she is creating authentic content because of the positive impact she has made on so many aspiring educators.

Another teacher influencer on TikTok, Chris Campbell or @neuro_d_teacher1, is very intentional with the type of content he produces and shares on the app. Campbell is a third-grade teacher in St. Louis and has been teaching for 11 years. He said that when he first entered the professional world after graduating college in 2012, he was told by his mentors to not have a public presence on the internet because people would "assume and conflate things" about him and his character. After the pandemic, Campbell said his perspective seemed to change.

"We can form a community here online and connect with each other. So that was like, a big part of why I got into it," Campbell said.

As a role model for his community, he ensures that his content is clean and family-friendly. "I make sure that if [my content] does stumble upon a student's desk, parent's phone, or anything like that, there is nothing that poorly represents myself, myself as a teacher, or the school district I'm affiliated with. So, I'm not swearing. I'm not doing things that are inappropriate," Campbell said.

Being an Example

Campbell first joined TikTok during the pandemic as he thought the app could be an opportunity for him to meet his students where they were -- online. He said that the digital landscape is where most kids exist today, so he knew that if he wanted to connect with his students, he needed to keep up with their interests.

His content slowly evolved from content for his specific students during the pandemic to content for his new, mass following. Currently, Campbell has approximately 90,000 followers on TikTok.

"So, then the next phase was like recognizing the importance of humanizing teachers because it was also during that time that a lot of our education systems were falling under attack [with] claims of indoctrination and grooming," Campbell said. "So, I'm like, hey, if I can exist here on the internet, maybe people can see that teachers are just normal people teaching normal jobs, doing our best to kind of make it a great experience for the kids."

Campbell also said that the platform has allowed him to go beyond the school walls in being an example of a black, male teacher with ADHD. He said that people on the internet can see that there are different types of people assuming the educator role.

One reason that Campbell became a teacher was that he recognized firsthand that not all students learn the same way. As a neuro-divergent teacher, he uses his platform on TikTok to share ways in which other educators can be the most helpful to their neuro-divergent students.

Campbell explained one instance where he had a student fidgeting by tapping his foot during a test. He thought about how his third-grade teacher would have responded to him in the past. "It'd be a very simple 'stop tapping your foot,' but I've learned through my education that you just can't take things away if somebody's using it. You have to learn how to replace it.So, instead of telling the student to stop tapping their foot, I simply ask them just take off your shoes," Campbell said.

Campbell said that sharing out these tips and tricks doesn't just help students, but the advice helps teachers too.

"Finding those different ways,and just kind of like sharing out these ideas that I'm growing in the classroom has been a great way to help other teachers that are neuro-typical to say, 'Oh, these are some very simple natural adjustments I can make in my classroom that I don't have to spend money on or go to an extra training; it's just like a quick 32 second video from some random guy on the internet.'"

Because of Campbell's unique experiences, he said he feels that the platform he has built on TikTok is an opportunity that he doesn't want to squander.

"It was never really one of my goals, but I had to recognize the gift that was given to me," Campbell said. "Like people started following me -- I have like 90,000 followers -- which may be small in a lot of spaces, but that's a sizable platform to be able to reach out and help."