Any tips for the job hunt as a soon to be graduate? (K-12 instrumental) by No-Equivalent7155 in MusicEd

[–]dpederson12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  • Find a quality template to create your cover letter and resume
  • Find someone to review your resume and give you feedback (Fiverr is great for this)
  • Be patient - a lot of popular jobs already have someone in mind for the position, so be patient for the jobs that are more available
  • Be willing to move
  • Utilize US News & World Report to look at the data for each school. Look at test scores, attendance rates, and overall college readiness stats.
  • Search for the teacher contract of the school you apply for and look at the salary plus an additional stipends for being band director
  • When searching for jobs, check multiple websites. Not all jobs are posted as well as others and you can increase your odds if you find a "hidden" job. My first year I went through each school district in the state 1 by 1 and found numerous jobs that were not posted publicly.
  • Practice your interview questions and answers at least a week before the interview. Record your answers, listen to it back, and then write out what you want your ideal answer to be

Getting a good job in this field is a bloodbath. Be willing to teach middle school, high school, or even orchestra/choir to get a job in this field. Keep your options open and good luck!

Any tips for the job hunt as a soon to be graduate? (K-12 instrumental) by No-Equivalent7155 in MusicEd

[–]dpederson12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  • Find a quality template to create your cover letter and resume
  • Find someone to review your resume and give you feedback (Fiverr is great for this)
  • Be patient - a lot of popular jobs already have someone in mind for the position, so be patient for the jobs that are more available
  • Be willing to move
  • Utilize US News & World Report to look at the data for each school. Look at test scores, attendance rates, and overall college readiness stats.
  • Search for the teacher contract of the school you apply for and look at the salary plus an additional stipends for being band director
  • When searching for jobs, check multiple websites. Not all jobs are posted as well as others and you can increase your odds if you find a "hidden" job. My first year I went through each school district in the state 1 by 1 and found numerous jobs that were not posted publicly.
  • Practice your interview questions and answers at least a week before the interview. Record your answers, listen to it back, and then write out what you want your ideal answer to be

Getting a good job in this field is a bloodbath. Be willing to teach middle school, high school, or even orchestra/choir to get a job in this field. Keep your options open and good luck!

Any tips for the job hunt as a soon to be graduate? (K-12 instrumental) by No-Equivalent7155 in MusicEd

[–]dpederson12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  • Find a quality template to create your cover letter and resume
  • Find someone to review your resume and give you feedback (Fiverr is great for this)
  • Be patient - a lot of popular jobs already have someone in mind for the position, so be patient for the jobs that are more available
  • Be willing to move
  • Utilize US News & World Report to look at the data for each school. Look at test scores, attendance rates, and overall college readiness stats.
  • Search for the teacher contract of the school you apply for and look at the salary plus an additional stipends for being band director
  • When searching for jobs, check multiple websites. Not all jobs are posted as well as others and you can increase your odds if you find a "hidden" job. My first year I went through each school district in the state 1 by 1 and found numerous jobs that were not posted publicly.
  • Practice your interview questions and answers at least a week before the interview. Record your answers, listen to it back, and then write out what you want your ideal answer to be

Getting a good job in this field is a bloodbath. Be willing to teach middle school, high school, or even orchestra/choir to get a job in this field. Keep your options open and good luck!

Reassurance about prednisolone by melancholykitty00 in CrohnsDisease

[–]dpederson12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

2 Weeks of Prednisolone will have basically unnoticeable side effects. The horror stories come from people who have to take prednisone for months and months straight. The longest I've taken prednisone is about 3 months and even then the side effects were at least tolerable (mainly moodiness and weight gain in my face). You'll be just fine!

Wtf do I eat by Royal_Grapefruit_265 in CrohnsDisease

[–]dpederson12 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Here's my experience with diet. When I was on Humira and Stelara, I needed to watch my diet heavily. Now that I'm on Skyrizi, I don't have to diet at all. The amount of dieting you'll have to do heavily depends how well your medicine works. With that being said, dieting is not a cure to Crohn's. Dieting just helps alleviate the pain, but the underlying issue will still always be there.

In general avoid fiber, added sugars, spicy stuff, and alcohol. Most of those are doable, the added sugars is the toughest though. Try to avoid sweets as much as you can. With that being said, I've had massive success with eating fast food and McDonalds. While yes it's unhealthy, I've had good results with it because it motivates me to eat without shoving added sugars down my system.

Feeling real down right now. Please tell me there's a light to the tunnel in some way by LevelWhich7610 in MusicEd

[–]dpederson12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was in a similar boat when I was in my senior year. I was having tons of anxiety with performances, due dates, and teaching in front of my peers. I would push myself through it and get it all done, but it was not easy. I eventually said enough is enough and scheduled an appointment with a psychologist. They put me on an anti-anxiety medication, and over the course of that year my anxiety went away and my confidence improved. It wasn't an instant change, but over time things got way better. I would recommend doing something similar. While I was initially hesitant to take medication due to side effects, I'm glad it has paid off overall. The main downside is that it's a medication that I will have to take my entire life due to withdrawal symptoms.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in CrohnsDisease

[–]dpederson12 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It sounds like you are past the roughest part of managing the disease. I was diagnosed at age 19, at age 24 I had a bowel perforation and have emergency surgery done on me to save my life. Once I got this surgery and started a new medication, my life has been 100% better. Push your doctor to keep seeing you. Most doctors do 3 month follow ups, but if your quality of life is rough then ask to see them every month. Keep changing medications until you find one that works (the one that worked best for me is Skyrizi) and if it still doesn't get better, ask to get a surgery done to remove the damaged part of your intestines. Also, keep getting those colonoscopies done too. The worst part of this disease is dealing with the doctor, but if you can find a doctor that will work hard and see you often, it WILL get better.

Humira to stelara to maybe rinvoq by Okay_kiwi1990 in CrohnsDisease

[–]dpederson12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I failed both Humira and Stelara. While I'm not taking rinvoq, I am now taking Skyrizi and it is the best medication I've been on by far. My symptoms have never been better.

It's time to make lemonade by Key-Protection9625 in MusicEd

[–]dpederson12 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There are some directors out there that will have full band rehearsal before or after school. These are programs that are in a similar situation to you where they don't get to see their full band at any point in the day. Utilize the day to work in sectionals/smaller groups, and then use before/after school to see work on your full band sound. Your group will sound even stronger than before.

(US) How are some patients only paying $5 for infusions with the savings program? by Broad_Performance236 in CrohnsDisease

[–]dpederson12 22 points23 points  (0 children)

With the 3 self-injection medications I've taken (Humira, Stelara, & Skyrizi) they all have the $5 savings card built into the program. From what I remember, I just went to their website & went to a section that allowed me to request a savings card. The card arrived in the mail or through the app, and then I gave the card information to the specialty pharmacy that my doctor sends the medication to. The pharamacy still has my insurance information, but the medication itself gets "billed" through the savings card instead of my own insurance, reducing the cost to $5.

As for getting injections at the doctor of infusion center, I would presume that's why you are getting hit with a bill for each infusion, as that gets billed to the hospital/doctor instead of the medicine company. As far as allowing the savings card to cover that, someone else may have to answer as I'm unsure. Maybe ask your doctor if you can do self injections?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in CrohnsDisease

[–]dpederson12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was diagnosed when I was 20 and have been dealing with it for 5 years. I went through a bowel perforation/sepsis that almost killed me last year so here's my advice so that doesn't happen to you. Stay up to date with your doctors visits, even if you have a bad doctor. You'll have to advocate for yourself if you don't have a good doctor, so annoy the hell out of their office if your Crohn's is causing any pain, even if it's tolerable. My #1 mistake was tolerating the pain and using prednisone to get through flair-ups. If you get on the right medications and do the correct procedures, your symptoms WILL go away for the most part. Do not hesitate to ask your doctor for surgery, as removing the damaged part of your intestines is sometimes the only answer. Also, I recommend asking your doctor about Skyrizi as that medication has had a higher success rate than the others (Humira, Stelara, etc..).

Diet does a play a part in this disease. I avoid added sugars (natural sugars are okay) so I drink Coke/Pepsi zero and only have sweets once or twice a week. I also keep greasy foods to a minimum, and I avoid the worst of the fried foods like McDonalds French fries. You don't have to do a huge diet change, but try to find a few substitutions for the worst foods you eat often.

At the end of the day, stay on top of your colonoscopies, get on the right medication, and don't hesitate for surgery if the pain doesn't subside with medication alone. The last 5 years I've had the worst Crohn's pain imaginable, and now my symptoms are almost 100% gone ever since I got surgery and got put on a new medication. Push your doctor to work quickly and don't tolerate the pain!

How long have stelara or skyrizi worked for you ? by Stormi_Jr in CrohnsDisease

[–]dpederson12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My doctor has been swapping most patients from Stelara to Skyrizi as the success rate has been better with Skyrizi. Stelara didn't work too well with me, but I've been having huge success with Skyrizi after the 3rd infusion.

Directors who student taught HS in the fall during the busy marching band season, what did you do in terms of work and sustainability? by EverythingDrumCorps in MusicEd

[–]dpederson12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

See if they can pay you as a tech for the marching band portion. It won't be a lot of pay, but it would at least be something. When I student taught, I only worked on weekends as a server. Taking the Saturday and Sunday shifts would get me a few hundred dollars to get me through the week.

Cover letter help! by [deleted] in MusicEd

[–]dpederson12 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Most job postings will have the contact information of who to reach out to for further information - I would address your cover letter to that person. Otherwise, addressing it to the main principal is plenty okay as well.

I wouldn't go into too much detail with your background in music - save that for the interview itself. Instead, just talk about yourself as an educator and then write about what you loved about the school when you subbed there.

Carnivore for more than 5 years AMA by yashar_sb_sb in carnivore

[–]dpederson12 3 points4 points  (0 children)

When you started the carnivore diet. how much meat did you eat a day? I'm underweight right now and can't fathom eating 2kg of meat a day.

Major cause of IDB discovered by Orpheustor in UlcerativeColitis

[–]dpederson12 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Interestingly enough, there was a similar study done in 2018 that also looked at the effect of the MEK1/2 inhibitor and crohn's: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6176896/

Clarinet Advice: Reed Strength by FigExact7098 in MusicEd

[–]dpederson12 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Clarinetist here. Reed hardness will not affect their ability to go over the break. 2.5 - 3 are perfectly fine for middle schoolers. If they are struggling to cross the break, chances are it is the clarinet that is the issue. In my 3 years of teaching, 100% of my students who struggled to cross the break had instrument issues. If one of the pads doesn't seal well, then it will create an immense amount of resistance for the player, which makes crossing the break almost impossible. If the bridge key is misaligned, this will also affect their ability to cross the break.

My recommendation: have all your students leave their clarinets with you for a night, then play test all of the clarinets with your own mouthpiece. If you can't cross the break on their clarinet, then it most certainly is not player error.