A letter from a disgusted teacher:
I QUIT
Kris L. Nielsen
Monroe, NC 28110
Union County Public Schools
Human Resources Department
400 North Church Street
Monroe, NC 28112
October 25, 2012
To All it May Concern:
I’m doing something I thought I would never do—something that will make me a statistic and a caricature of the times. Some will support me, some will shake their heads and smirk condescendingly—and others will try to convince me that I’m part of the problem. Perhaps they’re right, but I don’t think so. All I know is that I’ve hit a wall, and in order to preserve my sanity, my family, and the forward movement of our lives, I have no other choice.
Before I go too much into my choice, I must say that I have the advantages and disadvantages of differentiated experience under my belt. I have seen the other side, where the grass was greener, and I unknowingly jumped the fence to where the foliage is either so tangled and dense that I can’t make sense of it, or the grass is wilted and dying (with no true custodian of its health). Are you lost? I’m talking about public K-12 education in North Carolina. I’m talking about my history as a successful teacher and leader in two states before moving here out of desperation.
In New Mexico, I led a team of underpaid teachers who were passionate about their jobs and who did amazing things. We were happy because our students were well-behaved, our community was supportive, and our jobs afforded us the luxuries of time, respect, and visionary leadership. Our district was huge, but we got things done because we were a team. I moved to Oregon because I was offered a fantastic job with a higher salary, a great math program, and superior benefits for my family. Again, I was given the autonomy I dreamed of, and I used it to find new and risky ways to introduce technology into the math curriculum. My peers looked forward to learning from me, the community gave me a lot of money to get my projects off the ground, and my students were amazing.
Then, the bottom fell out. I don’t know who to blame for the budget crisis in Oregon, but I know it decimated the educational coffers. I lost my job only due to my lack of seniority. I was devastated. My students and their parents were angry and sad. I told myself I would hang in there, find a temporary job, and wait for the recall. Neither the temporary job nor the recall happened. I tried very hard to keep my family in Oregon—applying for jobs in every district, college, private school, and even Toys R Us. Nothing happened after over 300 applications and 2 interviews.
The Internet told me that the West Coast was not hiring teachers anymore, but the East Coast was the go-to place. Charlotte, North Carolina couldn’t keep up with the demand! I applied with three schools, got three phone interviews, and was even hired over the phone. My very supportive and adventurous family and I packed quickly and moved across the country, just so I could keep teaching.
I had come from two very successful and fun teaching jobs to a new state where everything was different. During my orientation, I noticed immediately that these people weren’t happy to see us; they were much more interested in making sure we knew their rules. It was a one-hour lecture about what happens when teachers mess up. I had a bad feeling about teaching here from the start; but, we were here and we had to make the best of it.
Union County seemed to be the answer to all of my problems. The rumors and the press made it sound like UCPS was the place to be progressive, risky, and happy. So I transferred from CMS to UCPS. They made me feel more welcome, but it was still a mistake to come here.
Let me cut to the chase: I quit. I am resigning my position as a teacher in the state of North Carolina—permanently. I am quitting without notice (taking advantage of the “at will” employment policies of this state). I am quitting without remorse and without second thoughts. I quit. I quit. I quit!
Why?
Because…
I refuse to be led by a top-down hierarchy that is completely detached from the classrooms for which it is supposed to be responsible.
I will not spend another day under the expectations that I prepare every student for the increasing numbers of meaningless tests.
I refuse to be an unpaid administrator of field tests that take advantage of children for the sake of profit.
I will not spend another day wishing I had some time to plan my fantastic lessons because administration comes up with new and inventive ways to steal that time, under the guise of PLC meetings or whatever. I’ve seen successful PLC development. It doesn’t look like this.
I will not spend another day wondering what menial, administrative task I will hear that I forgot to do next. I’m far enough behind in my own work.
I will not spend another day wondering how I can have classes that are full inclusion, and where 50% of my students have IEPs, yet I’m given no support.
I will not spend another day in a district where my coworkers are both on autopilot and in survival mode. Misery loves company, but I will not be that company.
I refuse to subject students to every ridiculous standardized test that the state and/or district thinks is important. I refuse to have my higher-level and deep thinking lessons disrupted by meaningless assessments (like the EXPLORE test) that do little more than increase stress among children and teachers, and attempt to guide young adolescents into narrow choices.
I totally object and refuse to have my performance as an educator rely on “Standard 6.” It is unfair, biased, and does not reflect anything about the teaching practices of proven educators.
I refuse to hear again that it’s more important that I serve as a test administrator than a leader of my peers.
I refuse to watch my students being treated like prisoners. There are other ways. It’s a shame that we don’t have the vision to seek out those alternatives.
I refuse to watch my coworkers being treated like untrustworthy slackers through the overbearing policies of this state, although they are the hardest working and most overloaded people I know.
I refuse to watch my family struggle financially as I work in a job to which I have invested 6 long years of my life in preparation. I have a graduate degree and a track record of strong success, yet I’m paid less than many two-year degree holders. And forget benefits—they are effectively nonexistent for teachers in North Carolina.
I refuse to watch my district’s leadership tell us about the bad news and horrific changes coming towards us, then watch them shrug incompetently, and then tell us to work harder.
I refuse to listen to our highly regarded superintendent telling us that the charter school movement is at our doorstep (with a soon-to-be-elected governor in full support) and tell us not to worry about it, because we are applying for a grant from Race to the Top. There is no consistency here; there is no leadership here.
I refuse to watch my students slouch under the weight of a system that expects them to perform well on EOG tests, which do not measure their abilities other than memorization and application and therefore do not measure their readiness for the next grade level—much less life, career, or college.
I’m tired of watching my students produce amazing things, which show their true understanding of 21st century skills, only to see their looks of disappointment when they don’t meet the arbitrary expectations of low-level state and district tests that do not assess their skills.
I refuse to hear any more about how important it is to differentiate our instruction as we prepare our kids for tests that are anything but differentiated. This negates our hard work and makes us look bad.
I am tired of hearing about the miracles my peers are expected to perform, and watching the districts do next to nothing to support or develop them. I haven’t seen real professional development in either district since I got here. The development sessions I have seen are sloppy, shallow, and have no real means of evaluation or accountability.
I’m tired of my increasing and troublesome physical symptoms that come from all this frustration, stress, and sadness.
Finally, I’m tired of watching parents being tricked into believing that their children are being prepared for the complex world ahead, especially since their children’s teachers are being cowed into meeting expectations and standards that are not conducive to their children’s futures.
I’m truly angry that parents put so much stress, fear, and anticipation into their kids’ heads in preparation for the EOG tests and the new MSLs—neither of which are consequential to their future needs. As a parent of a high school student in Union County, I’m dismayed at the education that my child receives, as her teachers frantically prepare her for more tests. My toddler will not attend a North Carolina public school. I will do whatever it takes to keep that from happening.
I quit because I’m tired being part of the problem. It’s killing me and it’s not doing anyone else any good. Farewell.
CC: Dr. Mary Ellis
Dr. June Atkinson

Here is another very emotional teacher explaining her personal experiences leading up to her decision to resign. Share the be-jeepers out of this one please.
Okay, one of the themes on this blog is that there
is something wrong with the North Carolina tests at
the end of each school year.
So, I went to a site of North Carolina education,
found the sample tests for mathematics, picked the
eighth grade, which was the most advanced test they
had, and answered all the question on all of the
parts.
My first conclusion was that the people who made out
the test should return to the eighth grade and try
again to learn enough about eighth grade math to
make out a good test.
My specific objection was for the last part and for
two questions. One question had to do with y = 3x.
The other question had to do with finding the phone
call with the least cost per minute.
The question about y = 3x looks just wrong –
incompetent. The question about the phone call
charges omitted the origin from the graph! Bummer!
Look, guys, for that question, having the origin
present would be a big help and, really, necessary
for the only good reason to answer that question
with a graph!
There was another issue: Somehow some North
Carolina (BC) math education people have decided on
their own to use their own wacko, smoking funny
stuff, nonsense notation in total conflict with at
least 200 years of rock solid math notation in math,
physics, engineering, with everything printed by
Elsevier, Addison-Wesley, Springer-Verlag, John
Wiley, D. Knuth’s rock solid, unchallenged, totally
dominant, international standard TeX, etc. So,
these NC quasi-math edu-twits often put a minus sign
as a prefix superscript. Arrogant. Incompetent.
Outrageous.
It does look like the topics in eighth grade math
are mostly a mis-mash of topics that should be
covered in a more organized way and more thoroughly
later. We’re talking, what, rational and irrational
numbers, ratios and proportions, square roots, areas
and volumes, some simple algebraic expressions, how
to put points on a graph, and the Pythagorean
theorem? This material should take a student, what,
an hour each night for, what, two weeks, with lots
of time out for TV?
In NC, there’s no excuse for bad math tests in the
eighth grade: NC is awash in good math expertise at
Duke and UNC. Heck, Davidson College has a good
math department.
Otherwise, I thought that the questions were not
very well considered but fair and reasonable. I
don’t see why teaching enough in eighth grade
arithmetic to permit passing that test should be an
undue burden.
What’s the objection with that test?
Please look at that test again. Now this time imagine that 2/3 of your students are not working on an eighth grade level (this number may be too low, I had an Algebra II class of 25 in which not a single member knew the proper way to find a least common denominator for integer values). For example, I had a seventh grade math class that could not do a review chapter on fractions because they told me the previous year’s teacher had skipped that chapter (verified to be true). Now, when you realize that in addition to teaching eighth grade math you must somehow teach the necessary remedial math where any teaching that does not address eighth grade test standards directly can get you a disciplinary write-up, that is one source of stress (when I did a review of finding LCDs in that Alg II class, I was instructed by the principal to never do such a thing again). Having after school meetings 135 out of 180 school days is another. Having some students miss class as many as six times to have their pictures taken is another. Combine this and other academic factors with trips to the principle’s office to answer challenges about why you are not playing one of the county school’s high-level administrator’s son more on the basketball team you coach and a whole other set of sources of stress can be seen.
Combine this with staff-wide blowouts from your principal on poor test scores including in math where the test scores were actually good in comparison with the rest of the state, but the scores that year had been renormed and the principal was unaware of the change (not to mention over half the teachers in attendance did not have EOC tests and were completely blameless).
Unless you have seen the absolutely incredible nonsense that goes on in NC public education (along with many wonderful INDIVIDUAL accomplishments), normal educated people could not begin to imagine how bad it usually is.
I know exactly where you are coming from. I was in a district where I was moved to another school, without asking for it, and told this is where I would be if I wanted to continue working. Then after 8 years of proficients and accomplished evaluations I was told that I was not differentiating enough or teaching the standard course of study. Now mind you we, the 6 1st grade teachers, were using the SAME lesson plans. But I was the only one they had a problem with. This interim principal, who was suppose to be a consultant from DPI, turnaround school, came in and cleaned house. We were subjected to this women telling us that we picked the wrong profession to be in, never once offered to tell us exactly what she wanted, never once offered to help, but was more than willing to fire us for not kissing her butt. As a result several tenured teachers resigned to keep their perfect records clear.
North Carolina doesn’t need teachers, they need superintendents who will work at being good at one thing county wide instead of buying into everything that comes down the pipe.
Very disgruntled resigned teacher from NC
p.s.- maybe we need a union here to prove a point to our legislatures and districts,,,,