Earlier today, I suggested a “teacher survivor contest” and invited readers to propose candidates to teach, as well as the rules of the competition. A reader suggests that teaching in an urban classroom is no more challenging than teaching in a rural classroom. I did not specify teaching either in an urban or a rural setting. She proposes a rural edition of the contest:

I’d like to see the contest as the RURAL edition. Bill Gates and the Waltons assigned as the teacher in a 1 or 2 room school, teaching from 7:30 AM to 4:00 PM, 4 days a week with students in grades K-8. Lunch is a brown-bagger with students. There is a morning nutrition break, which the teacher must prepare, serve, and clean-up.The teacher has all duties, and there are no “specials”, except music for 45 minutes, once a week, about 3 out of 4 weeks per month. Of course, there is no on-site special education teacher, so the classroom teacher must make all accommodations and modifications within the regular classroom, and/or must facilitate, (in the regular classroom with all other students to attend to) therapy via computer teleconferencing.The teacher(s) must provide lesson plans for every grade, every subject, every day, with reference to state and common core standards. There are no colleagues within a 75 mile radius. All disciplinary problems must be handled by the teacher, on site.Parents may show up at any time and may remove their children for such reasons as “he [a 5-year old] is needed to work the round-up”, or “he [an 8-year-old] has to go on the deer hunt with me if we are to have any meat this winter”. Oh, also, on a fairly regular basis, the teacher must deal with scorpions and with sidewinders on the playground, and the yearly tarantula migration that goes right through the school yard. No special training is provided or required to deal with these issues, and of course, they were not likely covered in the 5 week training (or even in a 4-year course). The teacher is expected to live on-site in a trailer. The nearest grocery store and gas station is 75 miles away, and the prices are much higher than in the city.None of this is made up or exaggerated; these are the actual working and living conditions in a Nevada rural school where I taught for 3 years., and the same conditions still apply. More often than not, the teacher hired for this position has little or no experience teaching, so perhaps the 5-week preparation isn’t all that much of a factor. I’m betting the oligarchs wouldn’t last a month, but if they should survive, they get the lowest pay in the state for their efforts, and if they leave before their year’s contract is over, their contract specifies that they will be billed for the cost of finding a replacement for them. Of course, they could also be sued for “abandonment” in this state, and lose their teaching license into the bargain.