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

Wow! What a sad commentary on teaching today. So many of us are on autopilot and in survival mode. The amount of paperwork continues to grow while more and more of our planning time is taken up with meetings, including the dreaded PLC. We are tired. We are demoralized. We discuss retirement dates like sports stats. I think the only answer for our personal sanity is to leave teaching when it becomes unbearable.
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Back in the 60’s, I saw both my grandparents (both teachers) stay up til after midnight each night of the week, doing paperwork. I also saw them have to “volunteer” at required school events, taking them away from their home and extended family. I vowed, at the age of 11, that I would not be a teacher. Teachers are used and abused, and it’s a disgrace that it’s legal. I won’t even go into their pay.
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This is why I left my classroom in NC 10 years ago!!! Sounds like nothing has changed!! To bad that the same thing is going to happen in NJ too!!! Guess I’ll be moving again 😦
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Don’t come to Tennessee.
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Things aren’t any better in TX.
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Ditto for Kansas
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Indiana is identical, except they now evaluate you on random pop-in visits.
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We refer to that as a ‘drive-by’. LOL.
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And these are the very reasons I find it difficult to sing praises for young people who are studying to be teachers! My sympathies to those in education with such curses implemented in the Ed. System in which they may be employed! CHILDREN ARE FAR MORE THAN A TEST SCORE! My generation and generations ahead and behind me were SCHOOLED THE OLD FASHIONED WAY and MANY ppeople in those generations were successful! I feel for teachers and the stress they are under but more so, I feel for the students that must feel, not just the stress of tests before them, but the sense of teachers’ stress levels! Too bad NC teachers cannot strike, legally…BUT SOMETHING NEEDS TO BE DONE WITHOUT THE NEGATIVE FORCES PLACED ON EDUCATORS!
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This is why I left the public education system after 5 years. I have taught in a private school for the past 8 years and feel so much more appreciated, respected and successful. I can teach my kids so they can learn without concern for preparing them for the next standardized state or county assessment. I’m a very student-centered teacher and I can finally do my job. I took a huge pay cut to make the change I did, but it was worth every penny. This is why I went into teaching.
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It sounds exactly like the public school in NE Pa. I had an education, my children did not. Everything she states in her letter is true. Its a very sad world we live in today. Money is the key. Politics is the highway. Grants, Grants & more Grants. Our Children, …… Not important, only the ‘ ones that count ‘ are. I know the future principal of VVHS very well. She knew the year she graduated that that was her destiny. She’s ‘ one that counts ‘ Politics, Politics, Politics. Yes, when she finishes college, she’ll have the job. It’s been in the same family for over 30 years. Shame on them all! My children are extremely intelligent, but lacked the training that they deserved because of Shallow people running matters. As I always say, God is watching.
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I’m a 14- year teacher.
Victim hood is not a feeling I deal with well- I work on my attitude or my situation- even if it means changing jobs.
I think that a great boss (principal , superintendent) is the only route to a tolerable teaching job. Right now I am good. If he becomes beastly, or if a less awesome principal replaces Mr. C, I will leave teaching. I am always aware of job board postings, “just in case.”
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WISE YOUNG TEACHER…VERY WISE…
SOME PRINCIPALS COME WITH CLAWS ATTACHED TO THEIR DIRTY FINGERNAILS AND A FAKE DR’S DEGREE..
THEY LOVE POWER AND THEY REALLY LOVE TO FIRE..
THERE DAYS ARE NUMBERED IN THE SCHOOL SYSTEM AND THE YOUNG WONDERFUL TEACHERS LEAVE THOSE SCHOOLS BY THE DOZENS…
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I did mean to use their not there..ooooooooooooops…I feel dumber than the fake DR…
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It took me eight years to realize all of the problems that you shared. The mistake made by people like you and I is to believe that “North Carolina ,like most southern states,intends to prepare students for life…Well that is not the intention!
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We are not teachers.
We are Testers.
Take a look at this test and do all of it.
Click to access alg1pprelease.pdf
Then look at the chaotic unpack documents provided by the Race to The Top Winners..
I do not like what NC is doing with that Race to the Top Money..
I met with a group of parents that are hiring a lawyer this week!!
Take that money you are spending on making these outrageous tricky(not thinking) Project Tests and buy some BOOKS!!!!!!!
I get so tired of that southern drawl talking mess you get when you talk to someone at NCDPI…..”Weee don’t want to fiiire teachers…wee..want them to leaaarnnn to teeeeach a test….”
By the time you get to half of some of these test..you will be in stitiches..
Agsin the Southern Drawl person says…”Weee plaan to maake a book of 1,000,000 reeeesources forr the teeachers….and weee hopee theeey willl heelp..”
Keep wishing lady..I would not give you air if you were in a jug…as it takes me 30 hours a day to prepare for this chaatic curriculum”
I have an app for VA where they do things right..
NC had gotten “Too big for their Britches” They want you to do activities and give you no extra practice on anything…They make kids with below 60 IQ’s take tests…
I hope THEY WILL BE FIRED…
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Beware of VA, my mom went back to school to become an elementary school librarian for her last three years to get out of the class room but still get her retirement that she had been working SO hard for. Growing up, I watched the Virginia system abuse her as well and that is the reason I dropped out of my MAT program in college. I would LOVE to teach, but I’m not willing to put up with that kind of abuse.
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Good for you!!!
Kris..please do the test from the NC website.
NC told up to do this and then that and the test is a Project..Not a test…They even have one of those silly Next-Now questions without a starting point..Purpose of those ????who knows?????? as they turn around and use the formal formula which is Previous to Now..
That little cuty is nothing compared to the questions that come later.
I am appalled that they have spent the RttT money to pay people to come up with this junk Math.
They are using the students of NC as Guinea Pigs…
If the teachers were not so fearful of losing their jobs, they would tell you that this year’s curriculum is totally out of control..They jump from this to that and from this to that…Teachers do not know from one day to the next what they are going to teach…
If parents in NC only knew a little of what their children are walking into day after day..NC was not prepared to implement this curriculum…yet they did..and they did at the EXPENSE OF THESE CHILDREN!!
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Kris
I think you should run for the superintendent and you have my vote!
First order of things…All of the people in that Hierarchy must teach a class of low performing students how to do Linear Programming and Recursive Formulas every 4 years..KRIS FOR SUPERINTENDENT.!
Someone directed me to this website and I can assure you that 99% of the teachers feel the exact same way you do but can not quit..Have you ever thought of running for office as I know you would have every teacher’s vote in this state??
Please help the teachers Kris..The curriculum is INSANE….and at the expense of the children..They have changed the curriculum in
some areas at least 7 times since August….Teachers are flying by the seat of their pants..They have to read the insulting “I Can” statements that the RttT people in the big R town have written which are so laughable..I know of one group of parents that have hired a lawyer to sue the State because of the Topsy-Turvy Curriculum….What have they done with this money????Made one BIG MESS OF THINGS..Publishers have very very very good books with examples but they refuse to give textbook money for any of them…
You also have the so-called Math County Leaders who insists upon using a book with 15000 words per page and zero examples of how to do anything..This is disgusting and cruel for our students !!Students know the teachers do not know what the heck they are doing and take full advantage of this situation..I do not blame them..They are being used as zguinea Pigs all in the name of a RIDICULOUS INSULTING DUMB TEST..
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What if you all walk out that door at once..
You go to the meetings and they feed teachers the biggest bunch of junk of how it is supposed to be done..
HMMMMMM….guess all that math that put the man on the moon and the satellite’s in space is worthless…
Guess we all have to get in groups and learn from one another..So I guess that means the students will take one of those RIDICULOUS PROJECT TEST in Groups
TO THE PARENTS…THEY CALL THEM EXPERIMENTAL PROBLEMS NOW INSTEAD OF FIELD TEST ITEMS..YOUR CHILD’S 5 HOUR TEST WILL BE 60 PROBLEMS…….10 WILL BE FIELD-EXPERIMENTAL,,,BUT YOU WILL NOT KNOW WHICH ONES ARE FILED TEST..YOUR KIDS ARE BEING AND WILL CONTINUE TO BE USED FOR GUINEA PIGS..NOT MINE..TOOK’EM RIGHT OUT OF THERE!!
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I could have written this myself. The story that I could tell would make people stop and shake their heads, and say what they always say, “no way, are you sure it isn’t you?” I cannot get hired in any other field. I wish I could say that what this author is saying isn’t true, but, I am a living testament to this as it is my story!
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I agree!!! Most of the teachers in the county where I teach are hanging on for dear life! I WISH I could get out – NOW. It’s sad that many of us have Master’s degrees and make so little yet; while the “detached” ones have NO clue and make the big bucks.These are the ones making it unbearable for the rest of us. I think we all need to strike……just a thought!
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Wow! I will be there within two to three years. I am exhausted and it isn’t even November. There is a breaking point for all of us and for the entire system. They are destroying our public school system.
This is also frightening. Student data mining, how much data is enough?
http://truthinamericaneducation.com/privacy-issues-state-longitudinal-data-systems/privacy-invasiondata-mining/student-data-mining-how-much-data-is-enough/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TruthInAmericanEducation+%28Truth+in+American+Education%29
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Reading these comments and that powerful commentary says one thing….the education system in this country needs to be dismantled and rebuilt. It is not at all about “learning” anymore; it’s about thrusting our children onto an educational assembly line, having all the “necessary” tests given to them, then, when they reach teh end of the assembly line, they are neatly packages and sent off to colleges, the military, the job market, or simply let loose to roam. Here in Alabama, we have had the tremendous good fortune (read that as highly sarcastic) to have hired a new superintendent that imposed against the will of the community, the digital initiative, whereby every student (yes, even 1st graders) was given a laptop or ipad. Why? Because HE knew what was best for our children and since we are in the technology age, they should all get onboard. Needless to say, we parents (as well as most teachers) are rebelling mightily. In 4 short months, over 40 teachers have resigned. This too, is part of the glorious change promised. Thomas Jefferson was in favor of revolution, for it showed the utter resolve and spirit of teh American people to right what they belive to be wrong. It is time WE revolt. Stand by….there sill be more.
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Jaybo
I agree that the education system needs to be rebuilt, but I am hoping it can be done with an evolutionary process as opposed to a revolutionary one. Revolutions can be highly destructive with long periods of uncertainty. Evolutions can avoid much of this.
Another problem with a revolution in education at this time is that there is too little agreement as to what the new education system should be. If a revolution were to take place, the advocates for change would be too likely to end up fighting among themselves with the children being the biggest losers.
I want to see people (students, parents, teachers, and others) who have a clear vision of something they believe will work being given a full opportunity to bring their vision to the attention of people in their community and to have the value of it debated. Where a particular vision receives sufficient support, I would want the local school authorities to be required to approve pilot programs that would test the vision. Some conditions would have to apply. A pilot program could not be based on discrimination or elitistism, and if additional funds were needed to run it the school could not be expected to cover them.
To avoid a sabotaging of a pilot program, the people who initiated the vision would need to be the ones in control of the pilot. If a pilot becomes successful then it could be expanded to accommodate those wanting to participate in it. The usual business concerns over how quickly a service can be expanded without losing quality would have to be taken into account. This approach to remaking public education would allow for reformers with varying visions to test out their ideas with willing participants. The ideas that work best will become the most popular and perhaps in time replace the ones creating so much grief today.
I like the spirit of someone who says: “It is time WE revolt.” I’m standing by. How can I be sure not miss when you share more?
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Another wonderful, skilled, knowledgeable educator bites the dust.
The system is nefariously set up to drain us and to push us out to the point that teaching is a career that no will pursue. I truly feel that her resignation letter should be sent to Randi Weingarten, Arne Duncan and to the next President of the U.S. Let them read the pain, frustration, disappointment, the belittlement, the lack of support, and the true reason why teachers are fed up.
I truly feel for my colleague and for all my colleagues who may be in similar situations but cannot afford to quit.
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Sorry to say this, but they don’t really care. They want teachers to leave; they want churn. This is an excerpt from the Democracy Now interview Diane recently linked:
No Child Left Behind is part of this global project to deprofessionalize teaching as an occupation. And the reason that it’s important in this project to deprofessionalize teaching is that the thinking is that the biggest expenditure in education is teacher salaries. And they want to cut costs. They want to diminish the amount of money that’s put into public education. And that means they have to lower teacher costs. And in order to do that, they have to deprofessionalize teaching. They have to make it a revolving door, in which we’re not going to pay teachers very much. They’re not going to stay very long. We’re going to credential them really fast. They’re going to go in. We’re going to burn them up. They’re going to leave in three, four, five years. And that’s the model that they want.
So who is the biggest impediment to that occurring? Teachers’ unions. And that is what explains this massive propaganda effort to say that teachers’ unions are an impediment to reform. And in fact, they are an impediment to the deprofessionalization of teaching, which I think is a disaster. It’s a disaster for public education.
http://www.democracynow.org/2010/9/3/educators_push_back_against_obamas_business
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About 400 letters were just sent to the president, many of which were filled with exactly this pain, frustration, disappointment, belittlement, lack of support and the true reason why teachers are fed up. Obama doesn’t care. Neither does Duncan. In fact, it’s exactly what they want – to get rid of the “entrenched” teachers who have the audacity to think they know more about teaching than the rheeformers do.
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Eh, I can’t see how that could be their goal since they would only be shooting themselves in the foot.
I know someone who’s been a teacher for several years and succeeded in a grant for those iPad things for the school; did the pilot study and all follow up studies to ensure the program’s success in addition to completing their regular work and then some (teacher burn out is high where they are so it’s a school full of people who really, really can’t stand doing their job so others have to pick up the slack). I wouldn’t call this person “entrenched”. They were completely on their own for that transition – it was their idea after all – and after several years of virtually no support has reached the point where they are simply doing a job. It’s not the principal’s fault, they are doing their job too. It’s the way the entire school system has developed. Teachers are people. You simply can’t expect a teacher to do the miraculous things that are expected of them with NEITHER community nor state support. So this forward thinking teacher has become, little by little, more embittered and more disheartened with the system. Pretty soon the school district will lose a phenomenal teacher with an amazing work ethic, who used to go to work every day over summer break even though they weren’t paid for it, because they don’t see the point going in to work two hours early and staying two hours late so they can prepare their classroom for the day and the next. Was this person ever once rewarded for their work ethic or dedication to their students? No. This person spent weeks and weeks preparing students for standardized tests that don’t mean a thing, unable to actually teach.
If it means anything, when I was a child living in NC my parents looked at public schools since that was what they attended. And then they sent me straight to a private one.
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Unfortunately, not everyone can afford private schools.
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Now I don’t have to write my story on why I retired June 2011. Kris has done it for me. Thank you.
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Below are a couple other similar articles. We’re losing good teachers to the stress and burnout of privatization and the over emphasis on tests as opposed to real learning.
I retired early because I was tired of the constant focus on the test…and the redirection of funds for public education towards test prep. With 35 years and a masters degree I was too expensive to keep. My school system cut the positions of reading specialists (mine) and offered an incentive for retirement to people at the top of the scale. I left teaching four years before I had planned…the incentives, plus the focus on testing instead of education was enough to drive me out.
A year later my school closed…the cuts in education funding by the state of Indiana, plus mismanagement by the administration has ended with the closure of several schools in our district. Children have been shuffled around to other places…and will be again with the next round of closings
I still believe in public education. I volunteer in a nearby elementary school a few days a week. I work with a few struggling readers, doing what I know how to do. As a volunteer I’m free of the test prep pressure and can actually teach again…instead of drill.
Former colleagues, those who are still teaching, tell me that they’re counting the days/years till they can retire. I remind them that the students still need them…and not to wish their lives away. But, the deer-in-the-headlights look on the faces of many of those still teaching makes me glad that I got out when I did.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/adam-kirk-edgerton/teachers-unions-issues_b_1856371.html
http://teacherpoetmusicianglenbrown.blogspot.com/2012/08/why-i-left-teaching-by-jordan-kohanim.html
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LOL…as a retired elementary teacher with 34 years of experience, additional certification in literacy, and a ABD in elementary language arts, I went down to the admin building of my district and volunteered to either work with kids or do something that would help teachers. Was told that the teachers’ union would never go for it. If the district tookthe stance thatvolunteers were needed, theunion would push for callbacks for excessed personnel. I checked with a teacher friend in the district (not the same one I taught in).When he checked with his union rep,he said that was true. I get where they are coming from, but it’s a sad state of affairs. Guess I’ll volunteer at the library…
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I am sorry that you were not allowed to help the students in schools, but hope that you have found a way to do it outside of the union contract. Perhaps there is a boys and girls club that would be interested in your helping students there.
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Excellent letter, she should send it to the editorial board of the NY Times or another large newspaper and challenge them to print it!
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I COMPLETELY agree!!!! It needs to be shared with the Nation!!
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Yes, yes, indeed yes! The word needs to come with experience, competence, excellent writing, and the passion for teaching that is (was?) what make you a great teacher.
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2012/10/29/letter-from-disgusted-teacher-i-quit/
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Yes! Yes! Or even Huffington Post or something that gets wide distribution. Can the blogger contact the original author and tell her to publish it?!?!
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I’m upset with how much that letter spoke to me.
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Wow, me too and I’m not in North Carolina
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I am in North Carolina. 6th year teacher, and so tired, always tired, I just want to teach my students. I have a passion for my subject, but not the unending paperwork and the finger blaming me for my students not succeeding.
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I am a 5th year teacher and I totally agree with you. I am responsible for delivering all subjects and with the New Common Core implementation across the board, talk about exhausted.
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I hear you, Kris. Your decision makes sense as self-defense, and frees you to speak out publicly.
But, before other frustrated colleagues take that step, I want to put out another way to “quit”: just quit the rat-race, and teach instead. Hold your ground, together, and teach.
One of my many teacher-training groups last week broke through to their frustration with the damage our years of data-driven policies are doing to our students, just as Kris describes. We also talked about specific lessons and activities to help the kids in our classes recover some of their hope and involvement in their own learning. Everybody had lots of ideas to share, genuinely effective things they do whenever they can squeeze them in, that deviate from the data-driven agenda.
“Then, why ever in God’s name would we not be doing this?” I asked. A teacher answered that we could no longer just “close the door and teach”, because our students are drowning in a sea of misdirection and policy-driven disorientation (although she phrased it much more carefully). Evaluation teams are walking through our rooms with Ipads at any time to make sure we’re pursuing the district goals in the prescribed manner.
So my suggestion is, open your door and teach. Let them put that on their Ipads. What have we got to lose?
They left us an opening, when they started inserting jargon about critical thinking, problem solving, and twenty first century communication into their promotional materials. All I do is actually, earnestly, explain my reasons for the activities they catch my students engaging in.
When you are required to submit a “SMART” goal, so you can be held accountable for data, write a true goal. As we all know, a rubric can be written for anything, so design your own data instrument.
We’re a free people. We each own the ground we stand on, if we choose for ourselves what we answer to. Choose, and then answer to it, minute after minute, day after day.
What can they do, fire you? OOOh, I’m scared.
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Yes!
The strength of rheeform (obfuscation and easily manipulated, nebulous data) is also its weakness. I have been doing it for years on those yearly professional goals and objectives forms without consciously realizing it. One could think of it as the intellectual equivalent of guerrilla warfare.
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Thanks chemtchr. This encapsulates precisely what I have been thinking lately. About 5 years ago, a vindictive administrator began the process of trying to muscle me out of my job because of a stand I took on an educational issue. Fortunately, I live and teach in a small town and not only do I have a lot of satisfied “customers” but news also travels fast. The next school board meeting, the room was packed with a pitchforks and clubs style showing of angry parents and he backed off fast.
Ever since, I have looked at everything the district wants me to do and everything I know in my heart I should do and I realize that doing it all would require 48 hour days and 14 day weeks. So I set my priorities and my daily to-do list according to my heart. I’ll do my best to do what the district wants, too, but I don’t start the things I don’t value until I’m done with my “heart” list. When my daily 12 hours come to an end, if the heart list is done, I go home to my family. I dare them to fire me. What’s the downside? The average entry-level chemical engineer is now starting at 20% more than I’m making now, so not a bad fallback plan.
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Great! Hang in there with your courageous stand.
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This is my mentality this year. I came from an urban school that was dangerous. Our principal was absent in his leadership – but the fear was there. Teachers would not fail students because they would not want to deal with the parents, who, while uninvolved, would pitch fits, even threaten teachers, about grades. You were quietly warned ro be careful whom you failed because you didn’t wanr to return in the summer to fill out grade change forms.
At the time, I was a mess as a teacher – fearful and new to the district where there was no support for new teachers and I had to figure out things on my own. I resigned at the end of the year. Many walked off the job because the students were so disrespectful and we had little support.
I was reluctant to teach again, but I found a job in a different district – and chemtchr, I figured out for myself what you are saying. I am rejecting this higher standards for teachers above anyone else. I am just going to do my thing: teach. And I won’t be afraid of being fired – I’ve lost my job to budget cuts, had limited contracts…I’ll find something else to do. I refuse to fear administration. So, I’m there with you. If I lose my job because I do my job, so be it.
Best of luck to all teachers breaking the Soviet model of education we adopted in the states. May your students be good questioners, respectful learners, and responsible citizens.
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Thank you Chemtchr! Your statement is beautiful, powerful and true. Count me in. I’m a teacher. I plan to teach.
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Me too!
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chemtchr
I tried it your way. I was fired.
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You’re not supposed to share that reality bit … in our economy, TFA fills all vacancies w/ wide-eyed (still wet-behind-the-ears) “students” who need to get rid of those pesky student loans. What a joke! Look @our nation’s capital — DC — a system run/managed by youngsters who never taught (but make good press, write good papers).
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Taking control of the curriculum is always dangerous…especially when the admins rushed out of the classroom after a few years to a desk job. I am an ex-teacher after 11 years in inner city LA. I miss the profession, especially the kids, and yes, there are no teaching jobs in Oregon thanks to ALEC. How far do you think you will be able to creatively tweak STEM anyways?
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Thank you for illustrating our power to make a difference. Fighting for what we believe in has the power to inspire even ourselves.
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Amen! This is exactly why and how I’m able to stay in the profession. It is all about the perspective you put on it. I can choose to focus on the “junk” or I can focus on my student and doing what I know may best prepare them to be productive citizens-not robots who regurgitate info on tests.
As a side note, Chemtchr, I’d love to know more about how all of you went about changing things in your classes after the discussion you had!
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Of course they can fire you, BUT… they can not fire everyone (they only want you to think they can !!) That’s why birds and butterfliles fly in flocks….that’s why penquins stand in groups…they win some; they lose some…. it’s all about working together!
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Teaching is hard to begin with, and we are trying to solve many different sets of problems, depending on where we are.
Robin, I know how hard it is to get fired for doing everything you can to get it right. I’ve been there, and somehow withstood it, but many dear friends who lost their jobs, health care, and retirement contributions can’t recover their balance. They search their minds for their own shortcomings.
I think fifteen-year teachers in their middle age are the most vulnerable to destruction of their own lives. There’s no social security, their almost-grown kids still need them, they’re too young for medicare … they lose their homes.
Nobody knows yet how to make education work for the generation we’re bringing up. Whatever we’ve learned about how to teach needs absolutely to be shared with younger teachers, though. We have to stand with them while they get their feet under them, because they do have so much to contribute, if we can free their minds and dedicate them to the mission we share. We just can’t duck it.
Yesterday, I closed my term grades, put the next unit up on my whiteboard, laid out the handouts for their next lab, and wrote notes for the sub who will cover my class during my upcoming surgery and recovery. That was hard, but then I found out that a former student has applied for the job.
Eventually, I realize, we’ll hand it over, with whatever we can save of American public education (including its flaws and unsolved problems). I got James Meredith’s book to read in the hospital, so I don’t forget how far we’ve come, and what it cost.
Keep your chins up, Robin, Kris, Alan, Dave, Pam, Spanish teacher and middle school teacher. It’s worth it.
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Inspiring and hopefully prophetic!
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I feel so dismayed when I read things like this and I sympathize. My clarion call for beleaguered teachers is to be stubborn. If they want to drive professional teachers out, then try hard to endure. The bottom has to fall out of this rheeform folderol eventually, and it can be outlasted. Easier said than done, of course.
They can have our Expo markers when they pry them from our cold, dead hands!
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I agree with 99% of what she said..All of her points are hitting us all hard. But why quit? She fought so hard for her dream, she’s obviously a great teacher. I’m not ready to abandoned my life’s work.
NOW IS NOT THE TIME TO QUIT!
Now is the time to stand our ground. Educate parents about opting out. Speak up at board meetings and town halls will local elected officials, take to the streets if we must.
Go visit your legislator’s offices and demand to be heard. Make sure your local legislator knows your name, make them know that if you show up at one of their public events that they will be challenged publicly.
Let’s grab the conversation, control it and shove it down the deformers throats.
But quit? NEVER.. they’ll have to drag me out kicking and screaming.
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She quit because it was “killing” her. They would of had to drag me out dead if I stayed.
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It is not time to stand our ground, it is time to fight back as we have no ground left on which to stand.
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I agree! I am in year 6 and feel more lost than ever before.
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“would of?” I hope you weren’t teaching English.
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have. No math. Wow, the grammar police are out there. Little sarcastic, aren’t we, Bill? Hope you weren’t a teacher.
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Bill, you should not be giving grammar lessons. When you say “weren’t”, were you talking about when she typed the comment? Are you referring to some time in her professional past? You used the wrong tense of the verb. I also noticed that you started your direct quotation with a lowercase letter. Horrible! Now, go back to where you came from, and take a grammar book with you. Please. Leave the teaching of English to the professionals.
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Thank you, Mike. I could not have said it better. 🙂
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I know you got a lot of junk for this comment Bill, but YOU ARE COMPLETELY RIGHT. There is ZERO excuse for a teacher of ANY subject using incompetent grammar like this. “Would of?” How about “definately?” “Loose” for “lose?” I don’t care what subject she teaches, she has a responsibility to learn her mother tongue if she’s going to use it communicate to students. I say this as a lifelong math nut with a MS in high-energy physics, whose math teachers throughout her life could actually spell and speak properly.
We’re in the Nth generation of the blind leading the blind at this point. The people who were educated in this system are now trying to teach in it. Wonderful.
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I sense it’s mostly a concern for her family why she quit.
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I wish you luck and good effort. I said the same, and have been fired.
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I agree with you. My stress lessened, somewhat, when I made the decision to do what is in the best interest of my students everyday. I think this is a moral choice, in many ways. I refuse to partner with those who would destroy the love of learning. Let the chips fall where they may.
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A am sorry that seniority rules forced you out of a job that you clearly loved and excelled in, both you and the students in Oregon lost.
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Too bad, so sad. It’s the case in almost any endeavor, public or private.
Otherwise you have principals who keep their favorites and get rid of people they don’t like.
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For every one horrific seniority story, there are multitudes of success stories never told. Teacher tenure is our last hold on logic to attract professionals to teaching. No one in their right mind will enter teaching to stay in teaching if they know at the drop of a hat they can be fired.
Beginning teachers are not as effective as veterans, period. Even the reformer’s generally agree with this in terms of VAM, not that I endorse that particular view.
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They are talking about getting rid of tenure in NC next year for all teachers. Then there is nothing left.
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As a parent, I find that tenure is good for the teacher and bad for the student. My daughter had a terrible tenured teacher that taught her almost nothing, lost papers, and had been complained about for many years, but is still teaching. Lack of tenure led to the loss of a really good spanish teacher that same year due to budget cuts. Money was “found” for the spanish teacher and a drama teacher but neither were of the same caliber (as in didn’t actually speak spanish!) as the ones that left because they were told that funds would not be there due to state cuts. Like I said, tenure doesn’t equal quality.
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Tenure doesn’t equal quality. But it does equal academic freedom, the freedom to teach science and literature in accord with professional standards, without fear of retribution and firing because of a small angry group in the community that wishes you would teach their beliefs.
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“Tenure” no longer exists in my state (Indiana), but when we did have what was commonly called “tenure” it consisted of due process. That meant that, before a teacher was fired the administration had to show that the teacher was not doing what was expected of them. In essence, the due process provisions of the state law provided that the administrators of a school or school corporation do their jobs. If there was a teacher who was not doing their job…and there were no provisions in place to help him/her improve, then there was also an administrator who was not doing his/her job.
In my state, the legislature has removed any due process requirements and teachers may be fired for any reason…at the whim of administrators. No proof of misbehavior or incompetence need be provided. As a teacher you can be fired in order to make room for the superintendent’s nephew, because the principal doesn’t like your politics, or because, as an experienced veteran teacher you get paid more than a beginner.
Tenure isn’t the cause of bad teachers.
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Exactly. Tenure is not the problem; it is administrators not doing their job that is the problem. Loss of tenure in states that don’t have unions especially will be disastrous.
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The form of tenure in NC is sissified tenure anyways. There is no collecting bargaining. All tenure is designed to do is allow the teacher a right to have the case heard by an Administrative Law Judge.
Tenure does not protect incompetent teachers, incompetent administrators do.
Tenure affords teachers the right to whistleblow and save taxpayers money.
All taxpayers ought to demand that teachers have tenure because it give the teachers a right to stand for kids without retribution from outsiders.
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Tenure should equal quality. It did 40 years ago when all my teachers were experienced. I had a stellar education. Perhaps today tenure does not equal quality because administrators overseeing teachers do NOT administrate properly; that is, they do not weed out poor teachers the first years they were on board. Because where I grew up, we didn’t have perfect, politically correct admin but they made sure the students had great teachers.
Today there’s a plethora of administrators who have never taught students. They got the supervision degree and filled the position, which suits the upper echelons just fine because they can tell these principals what to do and they will follow. Ask many principals to teach a class today? Most admin just do not get near the front of the room. So now what do we have? We are losing tenure for the sake of cheap, young labor. They don’t need training in teaching children because they’ll be gone in a year or two when their stint in Teach for America is over. Tenure doesn’t equality today because the populace demands inexpensive solutions. You get what you pay for, unfortunately.
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I disagree that beginning teachers are not as effective as veterans. That is an awful broad statement. Years of experience does not make a person a better teacher. You have to look at each person individually. I will put my students’ success up against any “veteran” teacher’s students any day. And guess who is the first to be fired when budget cuts come down the line; the new teachers, not the least effective teachers. It has to be very encouraging for new teachers to know that they will be fired first regardless of how good a teacher they are. Sounds fair to me, right?
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Next time you check into a hospital with an emergency, be sure to request an intern or a resident, not a physician.
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Love this a reply!!!
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I resident saved my life after the very senior attending tried to blow him off twice. I thank god every day for his tenacity. It is true that some veteran (fill in occupation here) are great leaders and teachers. It is true that the up and coming can be too green and not have enough real world experience. That said that green young people can be brilliant, and veterans can be closed to learning and being innovative.
What I know for sure is that greatness or ability is not always defined by years on or years of experience, nor is being new or green a paralyzing disadvantage.
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That’s a completely ignorant statement. I know plenty of veteran teachers with whom I worked who had no interest in really motivating the students because they were “on their way out” and “counting the days” until retirement… some actually had a model of read-answer questions in the back of the section-quiz-test EVERY WEEK. Beginning teachers, while lacking in experience, do not lack in heart and in new ideas that are sometimes better than “what’s always been done…” The character of the teacher is the important part, not the experience…
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Many professionals can be fired at the drop of a hat. Their skills and performance provide job security.
I do agree that generally more experienced teachers are more effective. The experienced teacher who wrote this letter was dismissed from the job in Oregon, however.
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And your point is?
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My point is that, for this teacher, the seniority rules of Oregon Public Schools forced this teacher out of those schools despite the teacher’s obvious merits and experience.
I wanted to make sure that folks also saw that part of the letter.
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Seniority generally means more effective teaching. Even the reformists agree with that. That situation sucks for many effective newbies but it is set up that way to protect kids and to ensure they have the best teachers available.
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Skills and performance only provide job security when the boss has an interest in your performance. When all decisions are made on the twisted logic of high-stakes testing and in the environment of continually shrinking budgets, the cheapest warm body with a license is the holy grail for school administrators.
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You need to understand that teaching is not like most other professions where output is easily measured. The complexity of what teacher’s put in, alongside the myriad of variables, and what comes out does not lend itself to easy critique. Teacher tenure affords teachers the ability to act professionally, which in many cases means opposing the system in order to protect kids, without being punished for such actions.
Teachers can work very hard, and perform above expectations, and not produce high test scores or high growth scores (using VAM) if they work with at-risk students. Similarly, they may not appease an administrator. Administrators use caution in firing teachers because they understand how complex this profession is. You obviously don’t. I suspect you have little to no experience teaching in the K-12 arena.
It is not fair that teachers be fired “at the drop of a hat”. No teacher should be fired at the drop of a hat. Our students are too valuable for that – we need to make sure those teachers which deserve to be fired are fired and not make mistakes that hurt kids and the careers of adults…careers that cost those adults tens of thousands of dollars in degrees in order to obtain.
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That’s what you got out of her letter? I imagine you believe that returning to the old days of patronage, nepotism and kickbacks would be an improvement. When you have surgery ask for the doctor with the least experience.
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Nope, that was just the second act of this tragedy. Without it, we would not have made it to NC.
Any time you treat people as numbers rather than individuals you will get bad outcomes. Making the decision to fire this teacher based on only the number of years in the Oregon Public Schools is dehumanizing. Teachers are more than their years in the school system.
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Wrong. Veteran teachers are better. That is not dehumanizing – it is a fact.
And you never answered the question from Tommy, “When you have surgery ask for the doctor with the least experience.”
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If I had to choose between a younger doctor who had performed fabulously in med school and during their residency and a doctor that was old, shaky and could barely hold a scalpel, I would chose the younger doctor.
“Veteran teachers are better”? Where is your support for that argument? I am offended that you view yourself as better than younger teacher just because you have been breathing oxygen longer.
They are not saying that every venerated teacher is offal and should be kicked out, but the same courtesy should be provided to new teachers.
One of the things that make the United States unique from other countries is our appreciation for the skills someone possesses, not based on their age. Next thing you know, if someone older than you tells you that racism is ok, you will have to assure they are right based on seniority. I for one will never sign up for assumption.
And before you ask, I went to public school in NC, have recently graduated from high school, and am currently attending college to become a teacher. I am a North Carolina Teaching Fellow, and even though I have not had my own classroom yet, I have already had more in the classroom experience than most first year teachers.
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How about choosing between an intern with five weeks of training and a doctor with 15 years experience?
Of course, no one can become an intern in a hospital with only five weeks of training.
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@ Me This was a veteran teacher, just not a veteran teacher in Oregon. Perhaps this teacher had a good deal more experience teaching than many of those the Oregon Schools did not fire. In any case, a teacher is more than the number of years they have taught in the school district. To treat them otherwise is dehumanizing.
As to the surgeon question, the number of years a surgeon has been in practice is MUCH less important than the number of your type of surgeries your surgeon has performed in the recent past, say the last couple of years. I am not sure why this is relevant to teachers, but you asked.
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Obviously he was not “veteran” enough. Laying teachers off based on seniority makes sense, generally speaking. Yes, there are times where it does not work out, but overall it is the best system. Not only does it protect veteran teachers, it ensures the best for our students. And it helps attract teachers, which we need to do with every opportunity.
You know what the question means – if you wish, translate the question a different way – would you rather a surgeon that has never performed the process perform it on you? Now answer the question.
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So sad, but so true. I am a teacher with 25 years of experience, the last 10 have been in the public school system in NC. This letter puts into words the frustration, sadness, and growing emotional and physical anxiety that I am feeling every day. I hear you Kris.
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I agree with Chemtchr. As an administrator, I too will be coming around with my IPad, and I hope to see just the sort of teaching described. As a matter of fact, I model it for those who don’t understand what great teaching looks like. I refuse to subject our high poverty students to low level teaching to a test that they will take in April. I want to see students who think and question, not just coming up with one “right” answer that can be bubbled in a multiple choice test. I want to see teachers who use their hard earned degrees to teach. Let’s jump back over that fence and teach. And make sure we bring our coworkers with us. If we stand together and support each other we might make it through this.
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So why do you need the iPad?
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Thank you so much for shedding some light on the situation in public schools today. As a mother of a student with an IEP- I am worried she will just be taught how to take the state exam- This yr’s first PTA meeting as 90 minutes on the new Common Core curriculum and explaining yet another standardized test. I wasn’t wowed. I am worried. I worry with an IEP I am tethered to a public school education in the South that is teaching for a test despite their best intentions. We attend an A rated school- But who knows what they REALLY means. I applaud you and wish you the very best. I hope you are able to continue to educate and find fulfillment in it.
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It’s actually the special needs students in the classroom that can benefit from IPads- not admins walking around the school. Some districts are seeing the light and working hard to incorporate this technology into the classroom.
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Thanks Bridget, I know many administrators feel as you do. Sadly, here in CT, when the new “educator evaluation system” comes into effect (it is in the pilot stage) students’ standardized test scores will be used as a component of both teacher and administrator evaluations.
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Actually, only 23% of all teachers in CT will have their evaluations tied to test scores….77% will not. CEA reported this at their “be informed for reform” seminars.
Teachers whose subjects are not tested, although we are cotinuously told we all teaching reading and writing via our content area, will not be evaluated by test scores. Only elementary (grades 3-5) and ELA/math teachers (grade 6-8 and 10th) will be evaluated based in the CMT and CAPT results.
When I asked what percent of all of the teachers in CT this affected, I was told 23% only.
Will it change with the SBAC and CCSS? Who knows?
Looks like all others will be off the hook…the rest are lambs to the slaughter….baaaah!
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Linda, aren’t they rolling out standardized tests in k-2 in CT as well? I have not been formally told so, but heard about it here on this blog. I can hardly wait or the “hard data” that we will receive because of them. My kids recently took a school satisfaction survey right after a lesson in which three kids ended up crying because the group disagreed with them in a class vote. Can’t wait to find out how unhappy my second-graders are with school! Next time will have ice cream first! 🙂
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I am not sure. We both read all the time…possibly Pryor, with no prior teaching experience and Malloy, the memorizer of useless talking points, will try to get that incorporated into the SBAC testing in 2015 or thereafter. Of course, you and I can tell these educrats how our kids will do even before they take the test, but why consult us even if we do spend hours, days and weeks with our kids.
Our districts, towns and cities in CT have no idea how much this is all going to cost. All of the testing is to be completed on computers within a twelve week window. We will lose the use of our computer labs for three months, approximately one third of the school year. Our legislators have no idea what they voted for….we can certainly educate them during our free time.
Has the SDE completed a feasilbility study to see if all districts in CT have the capability, (hardware, software and not to mention the costs of the tests including the grading) to pull this off?
Even the new evaluation system requires new positions for all to be evaluated. In Hartford, they hired 15 just to evaluate. Word is 9 did not pass the evaluator training and they now have to wait 90 days to retake the test and the district won’t tell the teachers which evaluators did not pass. Two have quit already. What are they doing in the meantime? Pretend evaluations?
This new system, including the pilot, will be the cluster%#%# of all cluster%#%%s. Just wait until they try to fire the first tenured teacher over test scores. CT teachers, start looking for labor lawyers….keep one on speed dial and start saving your money!
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NC is adding Standard 6 to all teachers and administrators evaluations. ALL, even EC teachers.
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What is standard 6? It’s not on my rubric here in NC, and I can’t find it online anywhere.
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@Bridget – thank you for being a leader. Thank you for concerning yourself with REAL education.
But what will happen when you observe teachers that don’t teach to the test receive lower VAM scores? What happens when your observation score doesn’t match VAM scores and your principal/superintendent starts asking questions?
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You can “hope” to see that but you won’t and you will not be allowed to look for it. No teacher has the autonomy or authority to really be a teacher these days. regardless of socio-economics, race, disability etc. students are nothing more than test-taking robots. Nobody wants people who can think because they might rise up and challenge the status quo. As long as I am going to be evaluated on a test score, then to preserve my job, I must make sure my students do well on that test.Teachers will stop using creative curriculula, stop sharing ideas, close their doors and teach the test. Maby when all the reform insanity goes away, i will be able to bring out my good creative ideas and get evaluated on what my students really know….or by then, I will have given up on being an educator. You kow why???? Because it is not fun any more. It is not rewarding and challenging or envigorating. It used to be…..I hope for the future teachers and kids that it will be that way again some day.
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You have hit on a key point–autonomy. There is research to back what you say, and I wrote about it on one of my blog posts:
http://robinwilsonjohnston.edublogs.org/
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If another teacher finds herself in this situation, my suggestion is to teach subversively, as suggested by Chmtcher. In the meantime, look for other positions or prepare for another profession.
Best of luck to you, Kris. My heart goes out to you.
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Going “underground” is the solution, but so is staying under the radar. I am anonymous for a reason: no need to paint a target on your back. We have to do what’s best for kids. Fortunately, I think my principal feels the same way, but would never admit to it. I have been cutting back on the meaningless paperwork I give my kids so that they are prepared for the CMTs. I am enjoying teaching them and not feeling the stress from knowing that my students are doing developmentally inappropriate assignments. It may catch up to me later, but I’ll take that risk. I have had classes struggle even with all the written work I assigned them, so test prep is not the answer.
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Test prep IS the answer Lehrer. I have seen it over and over – regardless of what MET and Gates assert.
This is why we have SAT test preparation resources.
Test prep generates higher test scores, especially for those veterans that have actually been involved with designing state tests for decades. We know exactly how those tests are designed, and we can design very similar tests that state departments devise. In fact, some of us have helped with that in the past. I have been part of schools in the past where principals suggested and forced teachers to teach to the test.
I’ve had graduate classes in measurement and assessment. I have been trained to design valid and reliable tests. I do so for my classes and have done so for years (but I don’t teach to them, of course). There are many more just like me – they have the ability to teach to the test, and they probably do to keep their jobs.
If I wanted to, which I don’t, I could easily turn my class into a test prep academy. But I am stuck in the olden days where I believe kids should collaborate together to solve problems, not prep for tests. I am not sure all of us that could choose the test prep route has chosen the alternative.
If I was forced to teach to the test, I’d quit (which I did in the past – I just switched schools). Teaching to the test invalidates the test, and it is a sad way to educate kids.
But this also sends another red flag – can we even trust state generated data based on their own standardized tests? I would say “no”.
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I agree with the comments above. Teach extraordinarily well, make them fire you for not test prepping enough or whatever, and that may in the end be an even better tactical move to shine light upon the folly of this data-driven (and dollar-driven) pendulum swing through which we’re all suffering.
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Let us criticize the system, not the teacher. Ms. Nielsen mad a difficult decision based on her personal sense of right and wrong. It is not our place to criticize her for making that decision in her best interests. To do so reinforces the idea that teaching is a vocation, not a profession, and that teachers are bound to remain in situations where they are not treated as such.
Ms. Nielsen, the profession is poorer for having lost you, but I respect your decision. I deplore the conditions you speak of and the legislative and administrative leadership that brought them about. Thank you for your words.
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I used to comment to fellow teachers, who from day one would talk about how many days are left in the year. That group would include people that teach the same subject, I do which is not an academic based subject. I would say how doing that was ridiculous. Until last year. Once again, Mayor Moneybags, continues to do whatever he can to destroy the system, ie, the union. After so many of my colleagues were deemed “unqualified” we all feel like it should be June already. I can not even imagine what it must be like for those who are teaching an academic based subject.
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Many years ago, there was one of those crazy fads invading California schools. Teachers were supposed to track each child’s skills and check off each one on a chart as the child progressed. Although this sounded like a great idea, if the teacher tried to do it thoroughly it entailed hours upon hours of paperwork. At the time, my children were still quite young and I was already spending an inordinate amount of time on the job.
One day I complained to a veteran teacher, who asked, “Honey, do you like to watch TV?” When I answered yes, she continued, “Can’t you fill out those forms while you are relaxing at home? Don’t you know where your students are?” Suddenly I understood what she meant so I took those forms home, turned on the TV and filled out those charts in no time. Yes, I just filled them in. My charts looked beautiful and I quietly shared the older teacher’s strategy with my friends. Soon many of the teachers were doing the same. No one ever knew and soon that fad died out to be replaced by others.
After that I always did what I thought best for my students and ignored dictums that interfered with my work. When a principal asked to inspect my lesson plans each week, I put old ones on my desk knowing that he’d never know the difference (he didn’t) and kept my real plans by my side, where I could access them. When the superintendent asked that an objective for each lesson be written on the board, I wrote any objective on the board and kept it there until he visited once a year. Once he left, I copied another one out of the teacher’s handbook, willy-nilly, and then left that one up for the rest of the year. No one ever caught on.
As long as a teacher is in her room for most of the day (even if evaluators drop in for a few minutes) she can design her instruction in such as way that it looks as though she is conforming. She can look at the standards and be ready to spout them as soon as someone comes in. Any experienced teacher knows that any lesson can be designed “to encourage critical thinking” or “ask students to reflect on learning.”
Teachers who are financially well off or close to retirement can really help younger teachers like Kris by teaching subversively and encouraging others to do so. But do it quietly and stay under the radar. Yes, these are tough times.
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The teacher who wrote the letter better hope North Carolina hasn’t blackballed her for not giving her employer notice, assuming this letter is even factual and not a lot of bluster. Many states can suspend your license for that reason alone. Then she will likely never teach again anywhere in the United States.
Given the current job situation, I doubt her district is shedding tears. There are a thousand other people waiting to do her job. They are just as good as she is or thinks she is.
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But are they? I don’t know that, and frankly, you don’t either. And if there are really “thousands of other people” applying, why do we need TFA? Because they’re cheaper than a woman with a doctorate degree. To heck with someone with tons of experience, let’s get those kids in there with five weeks of teaching! And as the Boomers retire and there starts to be desperation for teachers to fill positions, there will be a lot of openings.
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If there are thousands out there…why is my district (in NC) constantly using VIF or recruiting from other states??? If NC doesn’t AT THE VERY LEAST raise teacher pay to attempt to make up for some of the stress that comes along with teaching, we will continue to lose good teachers!
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Oh susannnunes, you sound like the people Mitt, Rhee and others would love to get on their side. I, as a 2 time state award winner, am losing faith in the system and maybe leaving soon. Careful for what you wish for. If us veterans who are really good at what we do can’t handle this, what makes you think that these youngsters will come in and survive? I’m sure someone can step into my shoes, especially when I will not leave a single thing behind as everything is on my own laptop and not on any of my school equipment If this continues, the teaching profession will lose many of the male teachers who look to other professions for more pay. And don’t worry about folks like myself, I will be just fine as there are thousands of consulting jobs that are in/and around DC for people like me that have lots of experience beyond the classroom (and I have a ton of it, I just chose teaching because I like what I can do and could raise a family with the salary and benefits). I’m sure those jobs will explode if Mitt wins because he and others like him don’t mind corporate welfare paid for by the taxpayers. Besides, I think most of the conservative teachers will be the ones looking from the outside in when their dream of “competition” happens. That’s when THEY will learn that they are NOT the best teachers but ruined it for the rest of us by making our lives more difficult by standing with Rhee, Romney and the rest of them.
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She said she was leaving the profession. She is now free to go elsewhere and be judged on her performance as a professional, rather than continue to be treated like a McDonald’s worker.
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She speaks for almost every teacher I know and respect, and she speaks for me.
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Same here Frustrated- in your neighboring state of SC. =(
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Thanks to Kris for laying out so clearly the reasons many are leaving the profession. Yes, I understand the importance of hanging in there, flying under the radar, closing the door and just teaching, playing the game, etc. I did it for a long time. But at the end of the day, we must all take care of ourselves and our families first, which is what Kris did. Finally, let’s give Kris the respect of getting his gender right. He is a man.
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Very sad story but it is all true. Good luck to the writer. When are teachers in America going to actually stand up for themselves like the teachers in Chicago? In my experience there seems to be a lot of teachers who are comfortable in their public schools and have done nothing to stand up to all the negativity.
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I hope I did not give Kris the impression that I disagree with his decision. He did what he felt was best for himself and his family and I applaud that. I wish him the best.
My remarks were for those teachers who feel (as I did) that they have to hang on to the job no matter what. These teachers need to adapt to their situation as best they can until the current climate changes or until a better opportunity comes along.
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To Lehrer,
I didn’t realize my post was “off the page”, so here it is again. I wish I could delete.
Back to you:
I am not sure. We both read all the time…possibly Pryor, with no prior teaching experience and Malloy, the memorizer of useless talking points, will try to get that incorporated into the SBAC testing in 2015 or thereafter. Of course, you and I can tell these educrats how our kids will do even before they take the test, but why consult us even if we do spend hours, days and weeks with our kids.
Our districts, towns and cities in CT have no idea how much this is all going to cost. All of the testing is to be completed on computers within a twelve week window. We will lose the use of our computer labs for three months, approximately one third of the school year. Our legislators have no idea what they voted for….we can certainly educate them during our free time.
Has the SDE completed a feasilbility study to see if all districts in CT have the capability, (hardware, software and not to mention the costs of the tests including the grading) to pull this off?
Even the new evaluation system requires new positions for all to be evaluated. In Hartford, they hired 15 just to evaluate. Word is 9 did not pass the evaluator training and they now have to wait 90 days to retake the test and the district won’t tell the teachers which evaluators did not pass. Two have quit already. What are they doing in the meantime? Pretend evaluations?
This new system, including the pilot, will be the cluster%#%# of all cluster%#%%s. Just wait until they try to fire the first tenured teacher over test scores. CT teachers, start looking for labor lawyers….keep one on speed dial and start saving your money!
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I was thinking about labor lawyers the other day, wondering if the CEA will fight against our terminations or whether we would need to take matters into our own hands.
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The CEA and AFT don’t seem like they could defend a teacher if someone gave them pepper spray and baseball bats.
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Reblogged this on Rhetoric, Resistance & the Politics of Literacy and commented:
A friend re-posted this on facebook this morning, and I thought it was relevant to our reading of Christopher Carter’s book. I also think it is relevant to our lives because we should ask, what am I getting myself into?
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Where I live in Pahrump, Nv, we have had 7 math and science teachers leave the high school this last week. They all planned to leave together as a protest. All of them had Ph.D degrees in math, and two of them had double doctorates in math and physics or biology. They left in protest of test driven evaluations now in place state wide here in Nevada, and they do not approve of the push to try to make all children go to college. As they stated in an open letter, They can only teach, advanced math takes a persistent concerted effort to learn. Many students in their Calculus classes do not need the class and are not prepared well enough to do well. Very few of these students will need the class either. To evaluate the teacher based on these factors they stated should be unconscionable. They close by stating that if math is so easy that all can readily master it, the district should have no problem replacing them. They all have other jobs in different states. None of them plan on continuing in public education.
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I feel obligated to note that this comment is untrue. Dr. Ravitch reported that K Spradlin’s account was hacked and this post, as well as several other comments, were made by the hacker posting on K Soradlin’s account.
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I will let the a–h—-s fire me first. I’m going to start getting my colleagues together. We’re going to start fighting back. My union has become useless. What can we do? We can disagree with the crap administrators tell us at meetings. Point out the silliness of the reliability of standardized test results from one year to the other because these results are from different cohorts of students. Some idiot says, “all children can learn.” Stop him. Say, “that’s a blanket statement not based in research. Where are your qualifiers and quantifiers?” Stop them a every point. We all have E-mail? And mail programs like Google lets us make signatures? Good. How about making signatures like “privatization = fascism” or “ed-reform = privatization.” We need to start fighting back.
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Actually, all children CAN learn, except for the very few who are in a vegetative state due to brain damage. It’s just that some children have a very difficult time learning and all children learn in different ways and at different rates.
Of course I know what you mean but it’s important for teachers to use the correct terminology. When a teacher implies that “some children can’t learn” that makes us all look unprofessional.
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The problem with the statement “all children can learn” is that it’s a blanket statement and not backed by scientific evidence. You wrote, “all children CAN learn” and then you noted an exception. So, no, not all children can learn. Why use the caps with “CAN?”
Every educator should read this article:
http://schoolmatch.com/articles/PDKMAY01.htm
Here’s how it’s played: When we buy into “all children can learn” we buy into a loaded statement. If all children can learn, then logically, if they don’t, it’s the teacher’s fault.
What can children learn? When can they learn it? How? Under what conditions? And is there a point of diminishing returns. At what point do we say, “This human being is not going to be a Nobel prize winning astrophysicist?”
How does stating “some children can’t learn” make us all look unprofessional if it’s the truth? We need to be brave enough to speak the truth, even when the political climate says otherwise. It’s this kind of thinking that’s helped the politicians and the edu-reformers paint us into the corner we’re in. This is why our evals are being tis to glorified IQ tests.
Better to say, “Even though not every child can learn everything, we’re going to give every child the opportunity to learn and develop within their abilities and talents.”
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Yes, I agree with your last paragraph. That is what teachers do.
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Inform the public. Fight back.
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All kids can learn. They will learn at different levels, but they can. It is the teachers responsibility to ensure it happens.
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But all children do not want to learn. About one third of my students are in class only because of truacy laws and are court ordered. We actually have case workers who walk them to classes. Try teaching in a classroom where a third of the students are trying everything they can do to disrupt learning and administrators won’t or can’t do anything about it because they have more pressing problems, like fights and threats. I’d love to actually be able to teach.
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Wow, I am studying to be a teacher with all these fears I keep trying to shove back about “teaching to the test” and not really being able to share a love for learning. I can’t help but wonder if I’ll be sorry for the time spent earning the degree and all the loans I am accumulating to get there…
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Most likely they will choose a TFAer over you…do some research in your area. TFA members are now scabs….taking jobs from certified teachers.
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Think carefully about your career plans. If I were starting over, I’d prepare for college teaching. Yes, that’s very competitive right now but even part-time jobs offer a measure of dignity and autonomy.
If you truly want to teach K-12, consider specializing in math or science and going to the affluent suburbs. There is also a need for Speech and Language Pathologists and they are treated well at this time. You are VERY wise to question your current career plans. Good luck!
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Part time teaching at the post secondary level pays very badly, often no more than a couple of thousand dollars a course. This is after spending as much as a decade in graduate school earning a Ph.D..
If Dawn could get into a top 30 graduate program in her field, her job prospects would be good. If not, it is a very risky way to go.
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This is my first year teaching. Previously, I was a teacher assistant. I am stressed, overloaded, unsupported, and generally disgusted with the fact that I now have college loans and a four year degree without the dignity of being allowed to use the bathroom during the day. Reconsider your career plans. I had to move 3 hours away from my home county, even though they hired several TFAs, and children of board members where I am from. Even with my positive TA experience, I had to find another county. Here I have less support, my pay was messed up for the first three months. (Year round), I am jumping through hoops to keep the county regulations up which usually include buying things. This money spent on the classroom takes away from what little my children get. I love teaching. I love my students. I love creating active, critical thinking lessons that require students to really dig in. What I don’t love is feeling like everything I do is not enough for administration, because it’s always a new rule or assessment tool…never a compliment or support.
The mentor program? Just paperwork. I haven’t been mentored. I have been shoved aside and told to “sink or swim”. Nothing on the mentor documents is true, but I had to sign them. I was directed to fill them out with made up dates and sign them….who could I turn to about it? Certainly not HR. Most definitely not a union.
Just think it through. Have another career path option just in case.
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I retired in 2006. I could see the profession going this way. I’ve kept in contact with teachers in IL,, NV., and NY. The stories are the same, so it is a national problem. I just never dreamed it would get this bad this fast.
I spoke to one teacher in a specialty that retire a year before me. This teacher was recently called back and lasted 3 days. I know I would not last much longer myself. I refuse to go back and substitute.
The educational system is designed to fail. Our economic system does not seem to be much different. I just don’t understand what the agenda is?
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The bottom line here in Louisiana is that teachers in tested grades will be judged solely by their students’ test scores (VAM), and the other grades by what our governor calls COMPASS. Our state legislators have backed our governor and thrown teachers under the bus by voting all of this into law. Our protests, phone calls, emails, letters, etc. made no difference. Now they are beginning to realize what exactly it is they voted for. Too little, too late. I have figured out that there is little I can do, but I will do whatever I can to make our school the kind of place that I would want my own children to attend. Some of the commenters here can be very judgemental, but I am the one walking these shoes. I know I can hold my head up and be proud of my work here. I will continue my efforts to support teachers and students no matter what laws are passed.
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What we need is to stand up, all 3 million plus public K-12 teachers!!! I suggest a series of “Apple Flu” days. If social media can bring down dictators in the middle east then lets use it for our wake up call to this nation. Show the public and reformers how wrong they are. We need to pick a random day and ALL call in sick from shore to shore and boarder to border. Repeat until we get our
voices heard!
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Two things:
1. I am a former UCPS teacher. I now teach in another NC school district. The grass is certainly not green in union county, but it can get so, so much worse. What I wouldn’t give to go back and not move to my messed up county where the grass is beyond dead.
2. This beautiful letter is exactly why I plan on leaving teaching to homeschool when I have kids.
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How sad. How very sad. And how incredibly accurate. Education In NC has long since ceased to be about children and their well being. Ever since the number crunchers took over, it’s solely about numbers, about who has power and who gleans selfish benefit. When the GOP seizes total control in November, things will grow yet worse. The drive to privatize education, for profit, will truly hit stride and soon our “public” schools will be a curious hodge podge of low achieving “public” schools, a scattering of “promising” charter schools, controlled by corporate interests, and everything in between. If the teapublicans are able to push through educational vouchers, we will see a full realization of education for the few and “scraps” for the rest of us. Glad this is my 30th and final year. I only feel sorry for those who remain, particularly the children of this state.
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Self deportation, the sad agenda of the reform movement. They want to drive us into the ground and break our spirit. Quitting is as good as firing you for a low VAM, either way they lower a salary and open a position for a less experienced teacher. My heart goes out teachers like this, for their loss and bravery. How about a national day of morning for education where we all wear black? Would that get some attention? The death of the great American School System!
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And as a North Carolina parent, this is why I chose to homeschool my children.
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I totally agree that testing has
taken over education. Testing took my media assistant, my ability to teach class centered around my information skills curriculum because I was thrown to the desk, doing the assistant’s job.
I was often used to test one special student at a time, therefore closing the doors of the media center to the other 750 more students that were locked out because of testing.
I retired as soon as I got my years in because of the testing taking over. Been there, seen it!!
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For the past several years, I hear everyone blaming primarily the politicians. It’s not the politicians who are driving this–never has been. They have jumped on the band-wagon—that’s for sure, and so has corporate america and the like. But the beginning and ultimately the end of this national fiasco are the teacher educators. It has always been in their best interest to create a paper dragon so that they can characterize themselves as the knight in shining armor riding to the rescue. Think about what THEY have been telling us starting 40 + years ago. Think about the preparation for teaching we paid our tuition for, and think about the power & clout they have gained over the past 4 decades. They garnered little if any respect, much less trust in decades past–now every idiot idea they come up with becomes next-days responsibility for we the teachers. First they convinced the school districts that high-level/high-quality school reform couldn’t be achieved if led by former-teachers-turned-superintendents. That school boards needed to hire Ed.D.’s. Now is there any school district, even ones like my tiny little school district out in the middle of nowhere that doesn’t automatically hire an Ed.D.? My thought is that when we start protesting the crap we are taught in teacher-prep courses and PDs is the day that this madness is going to start coming to an end.
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You are so right, Lynde. The teacher preparation programs drain resources from education, and add little of value. First, they made obtaining teaching credentials difficult and expensive in order to grow and maintain academic programs for teachers. Now, they have spawned untold numbers of well-paid consultants who take money, time and energy from the teachers and administrators who actually work with the children. With the constant change and occasional chaos — not to mention all the data — in school districts, it is easy for the consultants to manufacture “research-based” successes. Few have an interest in true student success. There is no money in it.
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What the writer omits likely says more about her than what it states. We all know the problems; teachers are overworked, underpaid, micromanaged, made to feel less than a licensed professional, etc. We get it.
But did someone tell her that teaching would be all about her?….Like this letter is?…And how posting it to a popular blog is?
She should have shared at least one example of how teaching enriched her students’ lives (before quitting mid year, that is) instead of how teaching just detracted from her own.
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Should she also have mentioned that the sky is blue, except when it’s cloudy?
There are things that need to be said and things that don’t need to be said.
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Ron Mexico, this letter is all about her like Animal Farm was all about pigs and chickens.
Read the whole thing and read it carefully. It is about the state of education today and gives voice to what many experienced, effective, talented teachers are feeling. We will be leaving in droves, through retirement, by changing careers, by not being replaced, as this is a job that increasingly is going to appeal only to talentless drones who think a subpar wage for meaningless work is their best career option.
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Hate to say it, but there might be some validity to your point, Ron.
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I say with deep sadness- spot on.
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Ugh. I live in NC. This breaks my heart and it is why I will likely be homeschooling or sending my child to private school. I believe in public education, but lately it (government, administration) doesn’t seem to believe in the public.
On another note, ages ago I mentioned that I asked Rhee to take me off her member list if I was on it (by signing a Change.org petition.) Diane, you asked me to let you know what came of it. I never got a response. Eventually I received an email from them talking about how great they are and asking for a donation. I asked to be removed from their email list, letting them know I find their views and tactics to be repugnant.
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I am glad that you are able to choose an alternative to the badly run public schools in NC. If enough parents make the same choice you do perhaps the public school system administrators will take notice.
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Yes, I’m lucky– although it will be tough. I still plan to work towards positive change, but not from the inside.
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Why are you even posting here? You are openly hostile to the very concept of public education.
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I certainly am not opposed to public education. My children have all gone to public schools for K-12, I teach at a public university.
I find statements like “why do you even post here” to be uncomfortably close to statements like “you are ugly, no one likes you”, “no one wants you here”, “why don’t you just go away”. I think I should stay and post, because I think people should stand up to those kind of statements.
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As a parent I hate the standarized testing. I feel like my child is taught to test. Not for the education that they should be receiving. I feel that half the time kids are put on an IEP so they have an excuse to why they don’t test well. I refuse to make a big deal out of EOGs. Because it just brings fear to the children. I have a child that was going to school everyday sick because of all the pressure they were under. Now that I reuse to let testing take over their life they are happy to go to school.
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I am sad to hear that another seemingly great teacher has been forced out. I had very few great teachers growing up and even fewer supportive ones. The great teachers I had did their level best not to teach just for testing but to give us something to enjoy about learning. It’s why I ended up majoring in English, that was the one subject I excelled at. The administration in UC is atrocious!! I had a counselor in high school tell me not to bother applying for scholarships I wouldn’t get any and she didn’t have time for someone like me. She also told me I couldn’t get in to any good schools. Mind you I took all honors classes and had around a 3.3 GPA. I proved her wrong but many other students were told the same thing and some were even told not to bother they couldn’t get into college. It’s sad that things haven’t changed here in NC and I know I will try my damnedest to send my kids to private schools when the time comes as a result. Many of my former great teachers gave up too so you are in good but sad company. I had hoped Mary Ellis would do good things as I’m a former student of hers however I’m not hearing good things. I wish you luck!!
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And Kris has not even mentioned the pressure to use unethical grading practices that seems widespread in my district–one of the “best” in the state!
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RE: Ron Mexico
My eldest daughter was a NC teacher for 10 years and finally got fed up with the very same garbage this woman speaks of. She quit and took a teaching job in Korea, where interestingly enough, teachers are so revered their parents are treated with great respect. This woman has the courage to speak the truth and take appropriate action, rather than bow down to foolish demands of the “RHEEFORMERS”. I applaud her!
Several years ago, I served on a school advisory council in NC, and when told the state was going to eliminate nationally standardized testing in favor of NC State sponsored tests, I asked what good will it do us to be the smartest kids in NC, if we’re dumber than the kids in all the other states. This occurred 20 years ago, demonstrating that the NC administration has a long, rich history of ignoring the obvious and working hard at making themselves look good, as opposed to actually teaching children.
Bottom line, it might do you some good to actually know what you’re talking about, rather than just spouting off!
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Thank you for sharing such a powerful letter. I see in my district, and others I have worked, the same issues. If I could change my profession, I would. As a teacher librarian, add to the fact that we are held to the same rigorous standards as the classroom teacher but without the respect and resources afforded them. It is frustrating and demeaning. I am teaching reading because my students can’t read. In our district, we are glorified babysitters as the parents do not support the schools. Can you tell I am tired and frustrated? I am, but I persevere because I feel like I can make a difference. I am not sure how much longer I will as it is becoming hazardous to my health and financial welfare of my family.
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Teaching is a vocation first. When our culture treats it as a 9 month job, we belittle the teachers, the children, ourselves. And our future pays.
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It’s not a “vocation”; it is supposedly a profession. Calling it a “vocation” demeans it by using such spiritual garbage and justifies the lousy pay associated with it.
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Here is my story as a NC teacher; similar, but I was fired:
http://www.chapelhillnews.com/2012/10/20/73444/i-still-hope-for-change.html
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I agree! I quit after 3 years of teaching in the zoo they called a school, and now I homeschool my children!
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You are a brave and impressive woman. You are the inspiration for little girls who want to make a difference when they grow up and educate their own children as well as others. You are strong and relevant. You are vizeral and objective. Your pain wreaks in the veins of all mothers anxiety over raising the best educated children who blindly send them into the incompetent gallows of halls once hallowed with academics. Today we send them to warehouses of misinformation and misguided hope. Bless you and your family and thank you for feelIng a mothers pain
Lisa Turkel
Raleigh North Carolina. Mother of 3 WCPSS
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While I am actually a man, I am also the father of three girls. I constantly work to make sure they know their worth and power. Thanks for the support!
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I went through many of those emotions as well, as a former teacher in NC. In fact, I wrote a book about this very topic. Check it out on Amazon! It’s called “The Angry Teacher!”
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It’s my opinion, my district would be thrilled if I quit. I’ve been deceived by a charter school concerning my accrued leave. My story is too painful to repeat completely again now.
In 2010, I transferred to another school in NC, but my 21 years of accrued leave did not. The charter school had an alliance with two adjacent counties for about 15 years. They were transferring leave between the three systems for years.
When I moved to another school system, not in their alliance, I was told it was against DPI policy to transfer leave or receive years of credible service from teaching at a charter school in NC.
I lost six years of service and 70 days of accrued leave. Since August, 2010 I’ve diligently and respectfully tried to get back what is mine from NC.
The NCDPI rewrote the teacher benefits handbook in July, 2012, due to my case. They know I’ve been cheated. That breaks my heart.
I love children and NC and I loved teaching for 21 years. Now, I’m just holding on until I can retire in 2014.
Teachers are responsible for EOGs, PDPs, 504s, IEPs, RtI, PBIS, MLS, PLCs…….help me….there are many more.
My point is, we are there for KIDs……not the money, unless you are in a TRAP and have no LEAVE.
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This sounds SO familiar…I chose to move to Virginia after I graduated from UNC…looks like both states are about the same!! I was forced to stop after 22 years and 3 months with the system due to a stroke I had one morning at school just before the first student came into the room from the buses. Several days afterwards, my new neurologist asked me if I knew what caused my stroke, and I replied, “Is Education on the list? 22 years of 8th graders can do that to you…”). Neither did he have a sense of humor…it honestly wasn’t just the kids, most were awesome, but I too was over-worked, not paid for helping students one Saturday a month, new ideas from California or Texas that they had already dropped by the time we implemented them, SOLs (Standards of Learning Tests) that take all the creativity out of teaching and learning, a room half full of learning disabled students and no aide provided, etc…that was 12 years ago..Lord, how much worse it is now!! I tutor local students and listen in disgust at what is going on….AND after a two-year recovery I was able to begin teaching at the local university…great change in discipline, but the same study habits as my 8th -graders!! ..They do NOT even know the simplest concepts that my age group learned!! I blame the excessive state testing…My stroke made up my mind for me to leave the public schools, but I still see results of the declining level of education these students have learned.now that they are college students…..it is so sad….
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I also am leaving the profession. It’s very hard to continue to work so hard for the education of my students, to do what is right for them, when I get laid off under the guise of “budgetary constraints.” In my last year at one school in NC, I put in my best year ever. Coach, club advisor, completed National Board Cert. led a student trip over spring break to a foreign country, wrote a Donors Choose grant, but apparently that was all too much for my incredibly petty and jealous dept chair, so s/he had me laid off. Then I go to another school and end up working with a colleague who never attended a signal staff mtg, dept mtg, or PLC, took off so many sick days that she was paying for a sub, was absent the last 3 instructional days before AP exam began and she still works at that school. This idea of MSL’s and my being retained and/or paid based on student performance is just flat out WRONG. So, I am going back to school to become a nurse. At least in that job I am evaluated on my own performance not my patients’.
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Well you better get ready because if you think “teaching” is bad wait until you get into “healthcare”. It is bad and will only get worse as Obamacare is implemented. Good Luck! You haven’t began to learn about regulations and expectations.
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Good for you! Aim in GA and it is just as ridiculous here. I love teaching but that is the the last thing we get to plan for, prepare for, and teach in a way that reaches the 20 individual students in the room.
We too are overworked, way underpaid and totally disrespected as educated professionals by our systems and our government and the public at large.
It is a losing battle and I feel like walking away may be my only answer too. It is sad to lose the opportunity to work with wonderful hopeful children but it is sadder to know the injustice being done to them and the people brave enough to teach them. Good luck in your future! NC is the loser today.
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When I lived in NC, I saw how the schools were – it was pathetic. A friend of mine who had a degree in English, but who had never taught, was hired by a local school district (her degree was about fifteen years old) on the spot. She just wanted to sub, but was hired full-time and given classes to teach in history and math! The pay is horrible, the conditions they work under are terrible, there is little regard for education or educators. Unfortunately, that is spreading to other areas – including where we live now, in PA. This is how we are supposed to help educate our children for life in the 21st century?
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You have written exactly what is happening in TN as well. Unfortunately, we are made to be robots from those who have no knowledge of our students or best practices to reach those students. Perhaps those in power know of a turnip patch where I might squeeze a turnip and find the specific type of blood the higher-ups may require; apparently, my students are to be squeezed for that special blood, but I am the one feeling the pressure of the squeeze. I am in the business of teaching children, but it is no longer about the children. At this point, I’m not exactly sure what it is “about.” Thank you for speaking out, and conveying what I am feeling. My passion and love for teaching children has now become a “job,” and that is the saddest thing.
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Kris’s story is a clear example of why public school education is a failure! As a public school teacher I’ve seen everything she’s seen in my 30+ years and more.
No matter what direction education has gone, or what new programs or philosophies are put out there for us to make us “better teachers”, it doesn’t change the sad reality – the US is steadily falling behind other countries in our education, and our performance rates have dropped significantly.
The only answer? Throw away the entire system and start from scratch! Let’s start with vouchers…when administrators see that students choose not to attend their schools, movement to “fix the problems” will happen faster than ever before!
The status quo will not work much longer – “nothing changes if nothing changes”!
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Not true. Time to take off the privatization blinders.
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Ah, yes, the magic in Laissez-Fairy land is powerful!
I don’t understand how people can say that we are droping relative to other, less profit-driven countries, so the answer is to be even more profit-driven in educating our country’s children.
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This is what I just posted on my FB page tonight. A friend sent me a link to this letter:
I think I just made a breakthrough in realizing why I have been so irritated lately about my job…on Friday I had two students that I was working with that really have difficulties. All of a sudden a lightbulb went on for both of them and they understood place value of ones and tens, and they acted like they had just “discovered” this concept (because they were never READY to understand it before)! It was exciting, and I was very thrilled for them! They were so proud of themselves. Unfortunately, due to the state testing, my joy for them was short-lived , because I started to think, “But they have to understand place value through thousands for the test!!!” That makes me sooooo mad! Why can’t children learn at their own pace, instead of some pace set by people that have probably never set foot in a classroom? It makes me very sad for them, and sad for me that I couldn’t completely delight in what they had just learned… Now I will shut up about that.
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I’m not a teacher, just a parent, and I have to say just wow. I knew it was bad, but wow.
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Not “just a parent.” Parents have the voice that needs to get loud. Parents have the power to make this change.
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100% correct. Politicians and the media can ignore teachers because we are see as ‘out for ourselves’… A mass parent uprising is just what the Dr. orders…
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What an incredible letter. My story is familiar. I was forced out my renewal year, after 12 years of at standard or above evaluations. My last year as an elementary art teacher, I had two schools. to get all the classes in, i had nine 1/2 hour classes on Tuesdays. I was 61, had death (step Mom) over Laborday Weekend. Caught a cols/sinus infection mid October. I was brought into the principal’s office on Wed. in my one planning period at that schoolmy first day back. I was told i was sub-standard in two areas and had until the next week to get up to standard. My next two and 1/2 days were at my other school.
This was the first time the evaluation standards had been discussed with me. It was the 1st time in five years I had had more than a cursory evaluation. It was only the second year I had had two schools.
I was threatened in the meeting about how I could be replaced. I left in an emotional fog, added to my sinus infection fog.
Long story short, I never got the standards up. Got into counseling took a two week medical leave in the spring and retired June 10, 2010! for several reasons I wasn’t at my best that year (my Dad had died two years earlier).
But, I know I knew how to teach and engage kids, even the EC kids, or especially those kids.
I have seen everything mentioned here and worse.
If it were for constant vigilance myEC) 16 year old grand son wouldn’t be getting what he needs at a top public high school in Mecklenburg. He has disgraphia. Anyone ever heard of it,or know how to treat it? Dore does but that is $14,000 per year. He is very bright, but you hardly can read his writing.
My heart goes out to all of you and to the kids. But, Kris, teachers have too much on them to make this change. So do parents.
I also happen to be a former elected official and hate the changes we are seeing. The far right anti government faction is very strong and very scary, especially for education.
GOOD LUCK!!!!
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All I can say is wow. I knew it was bad but not that bad. (Non-teacher parent)
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I was a pre-k teacher in a 5 star daycare in Wake County, NC and i loved it but she is so right. i did not want to pursue the k-12 programs..they are so behind and messed up. It’s so sad really. and our children suffer and Great teachers are lost. This is why theres so many bad teachers out there!
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This letter expresses exactly how I feel this year with my teaching. Two years ago things were bad, last year they were awful, this year they are beyond horrible. I love to teach, but I’m tired of being treated badly.
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I am feeling the same as the teachers above. I am also a NC teacher. I took on a former position, 1st grade math, feeling it would be less stressful for me (even with the new CC standards). Wouldn’t you know that there would be meeting after meeting and PLCs and Planning, and new pacing guides and the list goes on. I feel as if I am drowning.
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I’m so greatfull that my daughter moved from NC to MD for a job. My 11 year old grandson is now in a “top notch” school system that lets him thrive. He is extremely bright & in the Gifted & Talented program here but bored & really not moving forward. I know it was the system & not the teachers as I have many friends that are teachers. I hope this person moves to MD where her skills would be appreciated.
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In answer to the question “What can they do, fire you?” Well maybe not, but they can make your life a living hell, which I unfortunately found out. Close the door and teach or open it and teach, it doesn’t matter when an administrator is in your room every single day to make certain you are holding the party line. I thought I could continue my good teaching practices regardless, but I was bullied to the point of illness over my choices. I am now on medical leave. And not in NC. This is a nationwide problem. I think we can thank the likes of Bill Gates, who is vested in the success of charter schools, because through education, the rich and powerful can become even more influential. Take a really good look at who is behind the push for testing and charter schools, and ask yourself what their motives could possibly be.
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Yeah, they can fire you; it is extremely easy to fire a teacher or force them to resign or retire.
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Their motives? $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
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WOW!!!! This says it all and is absolutley the sad truth!!! I stopped sub-teaching because of the moral and frustration I see and feel everytime I walk in the building! Friends and co-workers just trying to make through another day in a “no win” situation!
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I am not a teacher but I had worked in a school system as an administrative secretary. I also worked as a special education aide.
This letter speaks not only for issues in NC but here in PA also. It is sad. It is the truth.
Best wishes to you and your family. You will overcome this and move on. You will be much happier. You will be stronger.
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Reblogged this on Transparent Christina and commented:
this is what out policies have wrought. How terrible.
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I have written this letter in my head so many times, but somehow I keep coming back for one more year.Many of my similar thoughts wound up in a letter I sent on my own but didn’t get a chance to add to the group of letters sent Oct. 17th, but here it is anyway. http://realmrfitz.blogspot.com/2011/09/teachers-letter-to-obama-lesson-in.html
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After 14 years of teaching, it was my three children who convinced me to resign. They asked to be HOMESCHOOLED!!!! I did resign and now homeschool my three children. What a blessing! My oldest has always been so far ahead and was bored. My middle child struggles with Autism and ADHD, so homeschooling is much more suitable for him. My youngest is dyslexic and was broken hearted in school to know she could not perform like everyone else. I don’t get paid………but I wouldn’t trade this time with my kids for ANYTHING. We struggle to pay bills and feed our family, but still it is worth it.
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I’m a parent of a special needs child in NJ. It was incredibly disheartening to read this letter. In our case, it’s the child study team that behaves as she described the administrators in NC. It’s talented teachers that make the difference in my daughter’s life. I have a very great fear of the coming storm in NJ education and it looks a lot like Dr. Atkinson’s experience.
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It’s like any other job; quit find a new one. You do not get to make the rules at your job. Do you think the McDonald’s workers like the conditions at their job? Heck no. Their job is to make them burgers. Teachers should focus on teaching. Leave all the policies and decision making to the people who were hired to do so. If you want to make big decisions; get in those positions to bring change. Trust me they will have somebody to take your place in the morning. Oh, stop blaming, do you really believe you have it all figured out? Right
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Thank you for putting the collective pain, sadness, frustration, and helpless feelings many teachers have today into words. I’ve been a public high school teacher in Minneapolis Public Schools for over 25 years, and this is the worst year ever. We work so hard, and this assassination of our profession and our schools by our own government is shameful. I am often moved to tears this year at how fast this privatization movement is moving, quickly infiltrating the institution of public education through TFA and inexperienced middle management of the district executing the federally mandated (Obama, why do you hate us?) “school reform” practices, breaking the morale of educated and experienced teachers. The future will most certainly bring shame upon the leaders who are currently in the business of shaming teachers in the name of dismantling our schools, and once we have a generation of charter school graduates who were taught in charters by rotating TFA unlicensed, undertrained teachers, we shall see how they will fair. It’s all about $.
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Good riddance. The irony is that you should probably be in administration yourself. You seem to be more interested in the advancement of your own career and not your students’ education. Not only that, but you speak of your “peers” in an extremely condescending tone. If they are truly your “peers” then you are not their “leader.”
Charter schools are the answer to this broken system. There needs to be a metric for measuring student performance – at this time, that metric is testing. One size does not fit all, and everyone can’t afford private school. The accelerated students need a better option and charter schools fill that void nicely. Why be scared of them?
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Chase, have you been a teacher and if so are you licensed? Your comments show me that you haven’t worked in schools at all or if so for very long. Very few charters are the answer, spend some time in one to see. I’d love to hear about a good charter and from a fully licensed teacher who has worked in one for more than 2 years.
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The truth of what really happens in schools around the country:
http://neatoday.org/2012/05/16/bullying-of-teachers-pervasive-in-many-schools/
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This article speaks for me and many. I burned out last year and was able to retire at the end of the year after 30 years of teaching. I am still trying to recover my health and sanity! God bless those dedicated teachers who are still able to hang in there in spite of all the abuse!
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I am also a teacher who left the field in disgust. I have also written about my perceptions:
http://robertsprackland.hubpages.com/hub/Why-Americas-Schools-Fail-Part-I
http://robertsprackland.hubpages.com/hub/Why-Americas-Schools-Fail-Part-II-Introduction
http://robertsprackland.hubpages.com/hub/Why-Americas-Schools-Fail-Part-VI-C-Teachers-Unions
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Every word is true…so sad, and yet the administrators in NC honestly believe they know what they are doing! I’m so happy for you and your family! You have been set free!!!YAY!
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I’m not free yet. I am fully invested in engaging and questioning those administrators. I’m not done fighting…not by a long shot!
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Don’t waste your time, Kris. It’s like the military. Once a person achieves a particular rank level, they have bought into the whole structure and whether they agree with it all or not it is of little consequence. It becomes a “careerist” thing for the overwhelming majority of officers in the military as well as administrators in public education. Willingly or not, they drink the Kool-aide. And it becomes all about the money, the retirement pensions, etc.
I am a retired teacher of some decades. I was able to work with NCLB and all it brought with it for four years before I made the same decision you have. In my case, it was pointless to continue further engagement with my top down managers. You say you are “fully invested in engaging and questioning” the administrators. Why? Sure, it’s a closure thing, but what do you feel you will be able to accomplish by fighting them? You will expend your energies and possibly impend your family’s well-being for naught. The fight will be on the streets, en masse. Not within classrooms and admin. offices.
Change will come from outside in, not inside out. Good luck.
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Thank you, Diane, for posting this letter. Thank you, Dr. Atkinson, for taking a stand, though I am afraid you are right, and you will just become a statistic at best. I feel your frustrations as New Jersey, where I teach, heads in the same direction as NC. I have been teaching only 9 years in the public schools and love my job, but this is a terrible situation and should be looked at in detail as more child abuse and neglect than anything else.
Unfortunately, I cannot quit. My family relies on my salary, which is okay for now, and my benefits to survive. Instead, I choose to fight from the inside. I will stand firm on what I know is good teaching from my studies in my graduate degree and my experience with my students in my district. I will NOT be told how to teach by some standardized curriculum created by people with no recent education experience, if any at all. LET THEM FIRE ME. I will, literally, make a federal case out of it if I have to. I will NOT let my students get a poor education because bureaucrats deem that to be appropriate for them. I will not let them graduate from high school — because they will, my school will graduate anyone just to make the parents happy — without a proper education in my class.
I hope others will follow this example. They can’t change education for the worse if every teacher refuses to teach the way they want us to. What are they going to do? Fire hundreds of thousands of us? Take Chicago as an example and stand firm and together.
In the words of my teen-age years: Just say no.
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I could list the ways I agree with Kris point by point if I had the time. What I will say is that I most relate to the feeling of being complicit in a system that is doing more harm than good to both students and teachers. Yes, I may make a difference in the lives of some of my students, but there’s a price to pay. Any teacher who cares and is trying to deal with this system is paying dearly indeed!
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Absolutely right, Chris. I left in part because I couldn’t stand damaging the education of the students who needed help the most. We’re hurting our children…I just won’t do it any more.
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Thank you, thank you for so accurately articulating what is happening in our public school system. I moved to North Carolina from Ohio after accepting a teaching position here in 2004. I resigned in 2007. When people ask me why I quit, it has always been very hard to explain. But it most certainly wasn’t because of my students. I loved my students so dearly. This is exactly why.
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Congratulations! I quit too.
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I came to NC 5 years ago for a teaching job because I was blackballed in West TN. I am glad that I came here at the time though because this is where I met my husband and now we have a precious 2 year old.
It has been a hard road. I thought that my second and third year I would transfer schools because I hated my job, but then I stayed because I thought it was just the hormones. I had to be gone for three months during the year my third year, 2 for maternity leave and one because I hit the bottom.
My third year, when I went out I thought it was the principal and all the stuff they were trying to get us to do, paperwork and such.
My fourth year we got a new principal, and I hated it even more. If it were possible we had even more paperwork and planning periods getting taken up for PLCs, team mettings, parent meeting, etc.
I have tried to transfer for 4 years with NO success! I am fed up!
3 out of 5 of our planning periods are taken up with meetings. We have meetings after school, not to mention tutoring, games, and such. We have the typer of teaching I’ve seen mentioned here, the ones that don’t need to be teaching anymore, newbies, and us in the middle. We have gone to the new Common Core curriculm. My test scores have never been great, but they weren’t horrible either. I am being judged on my ability to educate this future generation on whether my students can make a 3 or 4. Tell me since when, ANYWHERE, does 50 or 75 percent mean passing, but yet we tell our students that.
I have difficulty seeing myself as a good test-teaching teacher, because I was a terrible test-taking student.
Now I am in my fifth year. Our school is in block scheduling. I have a class that absolutely refuses to work, but yet I’m responible to get them ready for the EOG, Benchmarks, and whatever else test they want to throw at them.
As if this were not enough, my husband is also a teacher, in a different school. We have to juggle our son between us.
One time I was very sick, and I called in. I called too late. I was told I HAD to come in until a sub got there. My husband took off work to drive me to school because of that. Another time my son got sick at day-care and I was called to come get him. I have to wait for nearly an hour to leave because I HAD to wait on the sub. This is NOT right!!
IF I had a choice I would be a stay-at-home mom and homeschool my son and any subsequent children, but I have no choice. We need both our incomes just to make ends meet.
I knew I was supposed to be a teacher and I LOVE to teach, it’s the other stuff that is killing us all!
Something WILL give, what I don’t know. To all my fellow educators out there, the best of luck to you. I know we ALL need it. Stand together!
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I too left my teaching job after 26 years of watching so many changes in education! It had gone from teaching to “robot” of children and teachers it no longer was a teaching career but a job of “meeting those score”. Many years in Special education and the districts concerned began to desire huge gains in scores rather than appreciate and acknowledge small increases in scores which were huge improvements for my students. I made the mistake of becoming a target because I appreciated every step my students took rather than test scores. It is too bad that the field has been taken over by many young teachers who will be robots and the older wiser of us who have seen many things in education come and go have walked away from this beautiful satisfying career.
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The major problem and frustration with our education system today is we don’t have one. Instead of there being a single standard that all students should strive for, each state is allowed to set up its own standards. In many cases, the individual towns and counties have more say than even the state board. NCLB was a failure from day 1. Once again, instead of developing a national standard, it allowed the states to set up their own systems and penalized them if they would not or could not comply. They lumped the “achievement” of the stellar students with those who are learning disabled or not fluent in English.
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NO, national standards are not the solution they are part of the problem. See Noel Wilson’s “Educational Standards and the Problem of Error” for a complete destruction of the educational standards, standardized testing and grades and grading practices.
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Where can we get the text of the article?
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google is your friend.
http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/577/700
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It’s not an article although I have included one here. It’s his dissertation. I am going through it chapter by chapter (although I’m a little behind at the moment on my schedule, will have to update soon) at my blog “Promoting Just Education for All” at revivingwilson.org. Here’s the links the book review is shorter but more understandable. http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/577/700
Click to access v10n5.pdf
“A Little Less than Valid: An Essay Review” found at:
http://www.edrev.info/essays/v10n5index.html
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Where have you been? The Common Core has been adopted by 48 states and is a national curriculum.
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As a twenty-year veteran of public education (secondary ELA) I found many of my fears and frustrations in this letter. I could well have written it myself, but I would be hard-pressed to refrain from vituperation. Kris was so much more eloquent than I could have hoped to be. Recently, my colleagues and I have made a pact: We’re determined to share the good things that are happening in our classrooms. We are committed to supporting each other, because no one else will. I am comforted by the words of the Mahatma Ghandi- “When I despair, I remember that all through history the ways of truth and love have always won. There have been tyrants, and murderers, and for a time they can seem invincible, but in the end they always faIl. Think of it–ALWAYS.” If we band together through social media, as another poster has suggested, we can weather this storm.
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>> 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. <<
If "students and their parents" really, _really_ wanted to keep the author as their teacher, they should have hired her themselves, without multiple bureaucracies in the middle. Why did this not happen?
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No wonder you were miserable. Monroe, NC is the dullest town on the plannet. Nothing but fast food, discount stores, and used car lots.
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I was born and raised in Monroe and your comment is cruel and insensitive.
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This resonates with what I have heard about teaching in Dallas, TX. Like any other professional expected to preform — our teachers need autonomy!
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This, sadly, is an international truth. My dad was a teacher and he fought against the meaningless scoring system which forces education to become nothing more than a self-fulfilling machine. Tests do not determine the students’ actual skills, they determine what and how students are taught. Tests have become the end in itself, teachers are encouraged to cram knowledge into the students’ heads as opposed to teaching them how to learn.
My dad ended up leaving his job after nearly 30 years in the system, because of depression which as of today still lingers. He was a revered teacher, highly respected by his peers and even more so by his students (and I actually happened to be one of them) and their parents. The so-called “leadership”, who as pointed out is far removed from the reality of education, is more concerned about filling in quotas and satisfying even further removed higher-ups (aka politicians for the most part) than actually producing society-ready people.
I’m all for public, free and widely available education, but it would be an insult to real teachers to call this system education. Education has never been so available, yet the number of children older than twelve who cannot read or write properly or perform basic algebra is increasing at an alarming rate. The current system is such a mammoth that changing it has become nearly impossible.
Most organisations undergo a process of restructuring at some point, a necessary change in the hierarchy and the processes that ensures dead weights don’t linger and strengths are fully being taken advantage of. Yet public organisations don’t seem to be under the same sort of pressure. In a lot of countries working for the public generally means job security, at least for the people in administration. And that’s how you end up with an over-bloated hierarchy with people whose jobs have very little to no meaning.
This is particularly true in Education where there is an increasing amount of administration staff, often paid far more than the teachers to do very little, often against the benefit of the students or the teachers but for their own. So teachers are being laid off and hired more quickly than one can say ‘please no more meaningless tests’, yet this largely meaningless administration remains purely for the sake of creating and keeping jobs, which is utterly nonsensical given the purpose of education itself.
The only way out of this that I can imagine is for parents and teachers to force this restructuring to happen, to put education and its actual beneficiaries at the forefront again. I suppose we need to educate the general public about education, its true purpose, make it transparent and show what role each and everyone of us play in it, working for education or not.
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I taught Special Education for 5 years…have my master’s plus 30, and I just quit! My students didn’t fit in the “normal” box but I was expected to teach them as if they were just like any typical child, which they weren’t…they were and are special and deserve a curriculum designed for their needs. I taught for 4 years without a curriculum for my students who ranged in age from 5-11. When our district finally invested in the special needs students and bought a special needs curriculum I was already frustrated, burnt out, and had nothing left to offer. I felt like I was just surviving everyday for 5 years. One of those years the state actually took money from us for furlough days. We were being paid less but expected to work harder. Education in our country needs an overhaul. Teachers need to be respected and paid more.
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Inspiring!!!
“One day everything will be well, that is our hope. Everything’s fine today, that is our illusion” ― Voltaire
Hope your letter can bring awareness for those who still in ¨autopilot and in survival mode¨, thus accepting a status quo that makes us slaves.
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Okay, teachers, I’ve read most of these posts and
conclude that (A) a significant fraction of US K-12
teachers are angry, (B) the bureaucracies ask for
too much paperwork resulting in the teachers being
badly overworked, (C) the teachers want to ‘teach’,
and (D) the teachers believe that the tests mandated
by the bureaucracies are not accurate measures of
good teaching or good learning.
Gotta tell you: On these points, I can’t conclude
that you’ve made your case. On what you are trying
to say, in simple terms, I don’t ‘get it’.
And, also gotta tell you, really, especially in
education, I should ‘get it’. Why? In the words of
the movie ‘Pretty Woman’, in education I went ‘all
the way’. Yup, I hold a technical Ph.D. from one of
the world’s best research universities. So, in the
end, I did really well in ‘education’. And in my
career, I continue to learn rapidly. I’ve taught as
a graduate associate, lecturer, and professor at
three, large, well known universities, and I’ve
published peer-reviewed original research in several
technical fields. I claim that I have some knowledge
and experience about learning, teaching, and
education.
Now, for the standardized tests, say, the ones I
took in K-12 and then the CEEB, SAT, and GRE tests,
I can’t object: Those tests seemed reasonably
‘reliable’ and ‘valid’ to me. E.g., my verbal SAT
was 538 once and 654 the second time, and my math
SAT was 752 once and 768 the other time. And, yup,
I confess: It’s plenty clear that I have much
higher talent and accomplishments in math than
verbal. In college I got “Honors in Math” and 800
on the GRE test of math knowledge.
The farther I went in school, the better I did. The
research for my Ph.D. I did independently (fast,
fun, easy) in my first summer in graduate school on
a problem I brought to graduate school, and I got
essentially no dissertation direction or advice at
all. I turned in my work, stood for an oral exam
with a majority of the examiners from outside my
department and the chair from outside my department
and a Member, US National Academy of Engineering,
and graduated.
I don’t remember just who taught me the basics of
the 3Rs or how they did it, but otherwise I can
think of only two teachers who actually did much to
help me learn. First, in high school, I never could
learn French, but in college a German teacher, in
‘half time’ for one semester, got me to learn enough
German, nearly effortlessly, to get me through two
years of college German, some very difficult German
math, and my foreign language requirement for my
Ph.D. GOOD teaching. Secret: He taught German
‘orally’ first, reading second, and writing third.
The high school French teacher wanted to teach
writing first, reading second, and speaking third —
totally the wrong order for me. Second, in graduate
school I took an advanced course from the star
student of one of the brightest and best professors
in the world, and the material was astounding with
now a small part of it the key to my work.
Astounding material.
So, for me there is a summary point: I didn’t get
much from the teachers; the standardized tests and I
were good friends; and except for the 3Rs I learned
essentially everything via largely independent
study and still do.
So, net, I don’t get this ‘teaching’ thing: Just
what is this ‘teaching’ stuff you teachers are so
all wound up about? Heck, after, say, the sixth
grade, select a good text, assign a few chapters,
give the date of the first test, say will be
available for any questions, and go to work. The
grades on the tests in the class should correlate
quite well with the scores on the standardized
tests.
Here’s an example from high school plane geometry:
The teacher I had actually knew some high school
plane geometry — no joke about that. But she was
about the most offensive human since Stalin. In
class I usually had my head down resting.
Each day she assigned three not very difficult
problems in plane geometry. I ignored her
assignment and refused to respond in any way.
Instead, I looked at the 15 or so problems for that
day, passed the early trivial problems, and then
worked all the problems. For the more difficult
problems I wrote a little in the margin of the book
or on scraps of paper. Then I turned to the more
difficult supplementary problems in the back of the
book and worked all of them. Not once for the whole
year did I ever fail to work a non-trivial problem.
Yup, I did well on the state standardized test.
Only once did I ‘participate’ in the class: I’d
mentioned a problem in the back of the book; she had
the class address it; after about half the class
period had passed without any progress on the
problem, I outlined a solution; she ignored my
solution and screamed at me with the accusation that
I already knew how to solve the problem. Of course
I already knew how to solve the problem; I knew how
to solve all the non-trivial problems and would
never have asked otherwise. She thought that I was
some wimpy, helpless, brain dead wuss who would ask
an ugly, offensive, animated lard can how to solve a
problem in plane geometry?
But, in the end, she was not very good: The last
problem on the state test was how to inscribe a
square in a semi-circle, and I didn’t see how to do
it. But, of course, I kept working on the problem.
Finally I found what looked like a novel approach:
Constructing a figure similar to the desired one was
easy, and then constructing a fourth proportional
gave the crucial information for the given figure.
So, with this novel approach, I asked to see her
after school. She objected but relented. First she
thought it was silly that I was still working on the
problem on the state test. Second, and worse, when
I constructed the similar figure, she said, “You
can’t do that”. Her solution was to construct a
square on the diameter and draw the line from the
center of the circle to a non-adjacent corner of the
square which, really, was a less general approach to
what I did.
Later a friend asked me how to solve a problem:
Given triangle ABC, construct D on AB and E on BC so
that the lengths AD = DE = EC. Yup, again,
construct a figure similar to the desired one and
then construct the crucial fourth proportional. The
friend then said, “How’d know to do that? That’s
‘simitude’ and what we are studying in our advanced
course.”. I responded that I’d rediscovered the
technique in high school plane geometry but was told
that “You can’t do that”.
Take the book, study the material, work the
exercises, do well on a good test. What the
problem?
So, teachers, just what the heck are you screaming
about? That is, in your ‘teaching’, what are you
trying to accomplish that is so difficult? What is
this strange form of ‘learning’ you are trying to
accomplish that is so difficult to measure with a
standardized test? What’s so difficult about take
the book, study the material, work the exercises, do
well on a good test. What the problem?
I’ll give you one more: I have a project, in
business, to make money, where there actually is
some original math based on some advanced
prerequisites. For this business, I need to write
some software, and I’ve selected Microsoft’s Windows
as my ‘platform’ instead of Linux. Okay. For that
platform, there is a lot of Microsoft software
called .NET. I need to know only a small fraction
of .NET, but to learn it I’ve had to go through
about a cubic foot of books, of about 600 pages
each, and over 3000 Web pages of documentation —
found, downloaded, abstracted, indexed, studied, and
often used. Gotta tell you, in the vernacular,
there just ain’t no good ‘teaching’ for that
material. And as technical writing, the writing is
next to awful — D. Knuth is fast, fun, and easy,
but what’s available on .NET is nothing less than a
self-inflicted, unanesthetized root canal procedure
— OUCH!
Net, your students who can’t take the book, study
the material, work the exercises, do well on a good
test will be hopeless learning .NET, nearly anything
in computing, and likely nearly anything in the
future of technology.
Heck, such students will also struggle getting good
by themselves at auto mechanics, plumbing, heating,
residential electricity, building a computer, etc.,
that is, just routine tasks around the house.
For a coincidence, I will say that once I did look
at some North Carolina K-12 material in probability,
statistics, and linear programming and concluded
that no way should anyone in NC K-12 be permitted to
mention any such material to a student! Outrageous
incompetence. The K-12 materials I’ve seen on
calculus are nearly as bad. Advice: For those
subjects, just get good college texts. Period.
What’s the problem?
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I agree with everything u said!! it is so sad, but true-what will it take to save the teachers who really do care and love teaching….
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As a French student I’m sad, sad because I recognise too much of our educational system in this description; hierarchy is killing good teachers.
btw I wonder why teachers and their hierarchy use so much acronyms : it’s not useful and creates a distance between you and other peoples that does not know their signification
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I went to NYU to study English Education because I’d grown up believing that public education was the best means for achieving social justice our country had. I had excellent grades, I earned a perfect score on my certification exam, and I got glowing recommendations from my cooperating teachers.
The issues that Kris details here are why I left after just two years. I had successes I was incredibly proud of, but the realities of the system absolutely crushed me. I’m five years out from graduation now, and almost none of my peers are still teaching.
I now work in educational publishing, in the software development division, and the engineering perspective I’ve learned from my colleagues there has given me an interesting means to evaluate systems. And with education, I think there’s this romanticization of the factory model in an industry where it’s inappropriate. Where the inputs are human beings and intangibles like “motivation” and “emotional support,” you can’t control the variables enough to ensure high quality output via a standardized process. It’s a bummer, but children aren’t tidy machines.
I obviously believe that we need some national standards for what all citizens should know and be able to do based on the economic, intellectual, and emotional needs of our country. Yet somehow in the midst of trying to give everything to every child, and forcing all students into a college-readiness track, (with “college-readiness” inaccurately determined via standardized tests, anyway) we’ve missed out on preparing the majority of them for the realities of our mixed economy.
Now that I work in technology, I see firsthand how other countries strategically invest in and tailor their children’s educations, to the point that they not only meet the economic needs of their home country but others around the world as well. The developers, engineers, and QA testers who work offsite in India bill more per hour than I do, and the ones onsite bill three to four times as much as me (and while I make about $10,000 less a year than I did teaching, I’m still doing okay). In an economy that’s been down, we’ve been hiring the entire time I’ve worked there. The sad thing is that despite the outcry all the time about “immigrants taking our jobs,” we don’t have the talent in-country to take care of our business needs.
Half the people I work with didn’t finish or attend a four year college. I got straight A’s at one of the best schools in the country and they are all basically dunking on me. And while I’ve made my school and career decisions based on values rather than money, not everyone has that luxury. And as such we shouldn’t be encouraging so many students to prepare themselves for and make the exorbitant investment in four year college when they could be happier and more successful, both personally and financially, at a job that doesn’t require a degree.
It’s the nature of school that at any given moment, some kids will not want to be there, and they need some pushing to tackle the class. But this reluctance to learn can get to extremes and as such it becomes a detriment to the ability of a whole classroom of kids to master that subject. If a student doesn’t have the prerequisite skills for an algebra class because he’s been socially promoted, doesn’t want to be there, and acts out and disrupts the entire class as a result, that forces a teacher to take time from helping 34 students learn to discipline one child. This doesn’t foster the skills he actually has to make him one day successful in our economy, and it hurts the others tremendously. It is irresponsible of us as a nation to ignore alternative pathways in the frantic pursuit of high and often ultimately meaningless standardized test scores.
Bottom line: a standardized classroom with standardized teachers would work if we had standardized children and a standardized economy. We have neither of these. We need an actually differentiated education system if America wants to compete with other countries in the myriad fields that comprise the modern global economy.
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I applaud your decision. I don’t know of a single teacher here who is happy.
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You know what you just described? A real JOB! Something the University’s don’t prepare teachers for. It’s all “hypothetical” widgets and stuff. You described a JOB with all sorts of government and union involvement something so many of us deal with. When you were belittling other industrys (banking, healthcare, foresting and so many others) and saying “they need to be regulated to the hilt”, that’s what happened to us. And you said “good; they deserve it”. And now government is all over your industry. But government and unions don’t give a flying poop about you or the kids; it’s about their #’s and $$$$. See the irony here? But, YOUR JOB only requires you to work 9-months a year and, in fact, when you factor in all the days off during the school year, it’s less than 8-months a year. So buck up and quit whining. Those of us who have REAL JOBS deal with this every day. There’s a reason it’s called a JOB; not happy fun time. If you really care, then fight the system (of course, then the union will find a way to get rid of you because you don’t play by their rules). This is why so many are waking up to the damage government and unions do.
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Here’s the difference, Jim: your “real” job doesn’t have the lives of children and their futures on the line. Period.
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Here is another one for you, Jim. In your regular JOB in most industries professional workers labor for 40 hour weeks for around fifty weeks a year, resulting in 2000 hours worked in a regular working year. The average teacher actually puts in 65-70 hours a week to keep up with their JOB demands. Much of a teacher’s days off during the year also encompass working to keep up with the job demands, and require teachers to often spend their own money on this time to keep their licenses current with continuing education, but I digress. At 65 hours a week, assuming only for 36 weeks of work a teacher is putting in 2340 hours of work. In essence the average teacher is putting in 120% of the average time of a worker in a regular JOB in only 75% of the time. More work, longer hours, less time to complete it for less pay, in general. Now do you get it?
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I kept track of my school work outside of my contractual hours for an entire school year. It came out to 460 hours, or the equivalent of ten and a half work weeks, about the same length as my summer vacation. It’s not vacation folks, it’s comp. time!
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Make that eleven and a half forty-hours weeks! The brain is dead: Hallowwen and a hurricane in one week with second-graders!
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@Jim Redman – Yeah right Jim. You can talk me into believing teachers should just buck up like employees in other jobs when you can show me other jobs in which 50% of employees LEAVE in just THREE YEARS when the going gets ‘tough’ (attrition rate for urban teachers) and 50% leave in just FIVE YEARS in”better” conditions (attrition rate for suburbia teachers).
All your hot air is crap. Show me another type of job where PROFESSIONALS with multiple degrees, sometimes costing over 100K, leave their sites in droves.
Also, show me another job in which professionals, with multiple degrees and decades of experience, are paid 50K – 60K, which is the case in NC right now. By the way, most teachers don’t care about these figures – we are here to help kids, many of which come to us in dire situations.
Wake up. You are part of the problem.
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Two words – private school! As a public school teacher it’s exactly what I did for my own children. They are 30 and 28 and tell me to this day, it is the best thing I did for them!!!!!
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YOU HAVE MY FULL SUPPORT AND ADMIRATION! Get out of this muck we call public education. I do hope that you will find some energy to stay involved in the battle for the way teaching children should be!
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Dear Discouraged Former Teacher,
I’m originally from a very progressive education state, similar to Oregon, which is the very Liberal state of Vermont, and graduated from the University of Vermont (with honors and a Bachelor of Science, in Education). I have taught in North Carolina for the last 10 years, was brought here by Teach For America, and find your commentary somewhat disheartening.
My dear former teacher, you sound like a victim. We are all teacher leaders, and if you’re in this profession for the right reason, then you knew you would not have the highest of salary, nor the glorified job benefits. Nonetheless, you sound like a victim, and not a child advocate. Your complaints show you to be somewhat of a victim, because you were employed in an “at-will” state, without a teacher’s union. We don’t have teacher’s unions because there are so many reasons a union does not benefit progressive education.
This state takes teacher accountability to a higher level than many other states. Our state’s testing program is not set-up for students to fail, because there is the NCExtend II, yet you seem to have nothing good to say about Testing and Accountability. Is it because you were required to be accountable for your test scores, and maybe you were challenged by testing strategies effective educators teach students?
I find my job very rewarding, even though I know I will never be rich. However, I have touched many lives, and still receive emails from parents and students from many years ago. I have mentored teachers, and even have achieved National Board Certification, which was funded by the state of North Carolina. I also hold a Master’s in Education, concentrating in CIA K-12. However, I have no reason to complain, because right now, in this economy North Carolina is no longer a place where teachers are in “high-demand”. We are now staying in our jobs, and working with the administrators who lead us to become motivated and value the fact these administrators know how difficult our jobs can be.
As a matter of fact, with all of your complaints, I’m surprised you haven’t fled education in general. Anyone reading your comments should also know you’re right in some of your venting, but knowing a child relies on a professional teacher to push them to their highest potential is truly why those of us in education stay. We stay because we know what works for our kids, and we’ve found strategies in NC to teach them all the skills they need to be successful, in testing and higher level thinking ability. We stay because we’re invested in our children’s 21st Century learning skills. We find grants to fund innovative ways to reach the 50% of students with IEP’s, and we stay for the love of everything we have done throughout our lifetimes to deliver effective instruction.
You knew when you got into education that you would have tough years, some better than others. You knew when you moved here, something in your gut said this wasn’t the place for you. Well, I know that North Carolina is the place where I teach public school children, at an Urban School of Excellence, under the NCUST award (which stems from the West Coast). Therefore, you found the wrong place to complain about North Carolina public school education. Simply put, it wasn’t the place for you to begin with.
Sincerely,
Someone who dislikes teachers who act like victims.
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Victims are the ones who stay, play by the crushing rules, and churn out students who are good at passing tests.
I am not that. I am an activist. I got the attention of the leadership in my state, and I plan to engage them over and over, with the support of parents and teachers, until they start to listen.
Considering the outpouring of support and stories I’ve received, NC has been lying dormant under bad policies for years. People are looking for a better way, but don’t know how to get their. I’m not their savior, but I hope my choice opens up the dialogue to move us out of this mess.
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Remember Kris…. Natasha is one of the elite chosen few, the TFAer who is going to save the profession and close the gap even though they have been around for 20 years and they very well may be the status quo. Real change will happen when the parents, students and career teachers unite against the privatizers.
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Thank you!! I am in NYC, retired now. In which state did you teach?
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I am a UCPS teacher and while I agree with your statements regarding testing and state requirements with no relief in sight, I am deeply offended that you would say I (and others in this district and others across the country) remain victims who simply turn out robots who can pass tests. I’m sorry – I didn’t realize that was who I am and why I took the job. I did NOT take this job to turn out robots but to move students BEYOND the test to becoming productive citizens in our society. I whole-heartedly agree more can be done to fix the system, but to call us all victims if we stay in the job when you don’t know most of the teachers across this country and say we don’t TRY to stand up for our jobs, kids and education (WE CAN BE AND ARE ACTIVISTS TOO)… It’s disappointing to have a fellow educator say that about a colleague. I did NOT take this job for it to be about the test no matter how hard they try to push it. It is about the KIDS. I applaud your effort to get attention from the state onto our system but remember there are people fighting for it in the trenches too and you weren’t there too long ago.
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Apologies for the multiple posts… Something didn’t previously appear to go through.
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I am a UCPS teacher. While I can understand A LOT of what you are saying, I am slightly offended that you would call those of us who are still staying and teaching in public schools – victims and because we make that choice we’re somehow less competent or able to be an advocate for kids. Just because some of us stay in the profession and with the job doesn’t mean we (myself and I’m sure other teachers across the country) simply do it to turn out the robots you seem to think we do. I’m not in the job to please the state, create robots who can answer multiple choice questions or recite something verbatim but have no understanding – I am in the profession to push them BEYOND that to becoming productive members of our society. I am not a victim. I made a choice to make it about the KIDS. Professionally, sure at times I feel like a victim to the paperwork and the quiet nagging that’s always there but I can CHOOSE to make something better of it and remind the kids that they are better than a test.
As a sidebar about UCPS, I’ve been in 2 great schools in the county – different levels. It’s a matter of school culture that is set by the administration. I know a lot of schools in the district have had many changes but not all are like what you described. As someone who also leads professional development once in a while as a teacher leader, I would tend to say that the sloppy PD tends to be the state driven because there is no CREATIVITY behind it and it’s not TEACHERS putting it together and leading the way. Other PD I’ve been involved in…that’s teacher led- 10x more useful and helpful.
Again, while I’m glad you want to speak up about changing something that is broken – we do not need these asinine tests and some of the other policies – it is slightly disappointing to hear a teacher call another a victim to the extent that you would say we are simply puppets who can’t do anything. I had great expectations about this profession when I first got a teaching job. Over time reality HAS hit and it does drive me mad some days (the politics, measures, tests, paperwork, etc.), but when I think long-term, about the kids I teach, and what I have control over in my classroom – God help me they may have a test but it isn’t going to define them. We’re going to be problem solving, thinking critically and in new ways about important issues and things going on in the world. It takes a lot of work to do that while still knowing they have “tests” to take, but if it means a little more preparation for them for the future, so be it.
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You have drunk the Kool-Aid of rheeform. Teacher unions are a good thing, despite what TFA has told you. If they were so bad, how is it that the states with the highest number of unionized teachers also have the highest percentage of high performing students?
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I taught one semester in North Carolina and went back to corporate America. You stated your case well.
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I am so sorry, as a parent in Rowan County it is so sad to see the lack of support the teachers get. My child is in EC. she is a very high functioning person with Down Syndrome, at 12 years of age her Dr. is looking into putting her on a form of Zanax to help control her stress from these inclusion classes. Parents have to get together and make some changes.
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Absolutely! Parents are the key.
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I’m devastated for our teachers, our communities, our children & our future! We are in a time where those who have gone to school before us are disconnected from the truth that forget about “No Child Left Behind” because they (the public school students) are going to be!!! I’m overwhelmed as a parent and honestly don’t know what to do…I’m voting out our old State Superintendent who seems more motivated to further his political career and advance the privatization of our public schools than actually fight for them and their success but other than that feel utterly powerless. Thanks for this post….I wish everyone would read it!!!!
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Preach it!
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We homeschool. Kids are less stressed out. We can stay with a topic as long as they like. We take trips regularly and see the place and things behind history. All are doing better than public school kids, and with far less effort of busy work and learning obedience to authority. Our 8 year old is programming mods to Minecraft in Java which he taught himself. Our 13 year old is running an on line business and plays in a band. He’s already mastered Calculus and Latin, just studying at his own pace.
We’re not geniuses or special. This is what happens normally when you don’t beat the love of learning out of children through busywork while exposing them to a violent Lord of the Flies environment.
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I taught in Indiana public elementary schools for 10 years. I have Associates, Bachelors and Masters degrees and just a few months ago I gave it all up. I was working 45-50 hours JUST AT SCHOOL each week which does not include going in on weekends, working from home or attending conferences, parent night, PTA fundraisers etc. I’d leave my house when it was dark, and come home when it was dark. My 12 month old son was getting about 30 minutes of time with me each day and my husband not much more. I was grouchy, stressed out and hard to be around. For all of this, I was evaluated as a 2/4, or “needs improvement” on our district rubric and was expected to do much more paperwork to document how I am going to become a 3/4 or 4/4. After much prayer and reflection I realized it just wasn’t worth it…and I quit! I don’t miss it and I’ve never looked back.
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Can we do anything? Maybe create kickstarter project and sue Education board? I will donate 100$
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The sad truth is this: Many students are graduated from high school and walk across a stage to receive a diploma, yet some of those students who have the diplomas in their hands are walking away from those stages toward their futures WITHOUT AN EDUCATION. They aren’t prepared for their futures — far from it — yet they passed the required tests for required courses.
I’m a retired sixth-grade English Language Arts teacher, 25 years teaching and five years as a substitute teacher, and I did the unthinkable. I taught more than our state standards. I turned in my lesson plans, but I’m not sure neither my curriculum facilitator nor my school administrators knew what was and what wasn’t a standard.
But by golly, I prepared my students for their futures as varied as they might become. I prepared my students to: write in order to communicate for real purposes, hone their listening skills, look at the person to whom they are speaking or look at the person who is speaking to them, learn how to outline text, organize themselves (binders,backpacks, cubbies), problem-solve, speak in an acceptable educated fashion, work in/with a group, read with understanding many forms of text including technical articles, read directions to construct buildings, grow in appreciation for literature, learn the origination of the English language and study the meanings of Greek and Latin prefixes, suffixes, and root words, have respect for the point-of-view of others, speak in a respectful manner, respect others by their actions, be a doer not a sitter, study some every night — not just the night before a test, show appreciation for what they have, accept the fact that while in my classroom their classmates are their brothers and sisters and should be treated like family, apply the Golden Rule, praise others when their classmates have done a great job, assist others when it is needed before asking me. (We can’t run to our bosses every time we have a question. We must work together to solve problems. Then, if their team cannot determine an answer, the team comes to me for guidance), understand when it’s helpful to talk and when to stay quiet, to say “Thank you” to others, to say, “I’m sorry” to others.
In addition, one of the most important things I emphasized was to help each child have the desire to love to come to school — to feel as if our classroom was their home-away-from-home with me as their mother then grandmother as I grew older. In those 30 years, I think I only raised my voice maybe four or five times. I didn’t have to. I wanted my students to learn in a safe, comfortable learning environment with none of the worries they might have outside our school walls. I loved, loved, and still love all my students and there have been thousands of them because I was departmentalized all those years teaching a minimum of 50ish students and as many as 100 or more each year.
I miss those boys and girls, and I miss my co-worker families ( I was in three schools for those 30 years.) Each one has a special place in my heart. I am part of who they are, and they are part of who I am. Let me tell you this, also. Some of those precious children became role models for me. Their patience, love for others, and genuine desire to help others helped me be the person I always wanted to be. Children can be leaders.
In conclusion, I said all that to say this. To you young teachers I say find a seasoned teacher who you admire and talk to them several times a week. Seasoned teachers, share your knowledge; you will make our future world a better place. In one school where I taught, I had the most wonderful co-workers who taught the same ELA subjects I taught but at different grade levels. The three of us were in each others’ rooms every afternoon discussing what we had done that day and what we would do tomorrow and next week and next month. We were so in tune our students had a seemless flow from year-to-year in Language Arts.
If you do what you know you should do to educate your students, the standards will not only be covered but also mastered. Our students deserve our best. I always felt teaching was my missionary work at home. It was my gift to those precious children, and they enriched my life so much more than anything I could ever do for them.
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Well said, VERY well said…That is why I, an innovative elementary principal, took early retirement. Sick of having non-educators or jocks tell me what they know about teaching reading to young children or how to make math exciting. What they know I learned in the FIRST of my four degrees and I could put that information in my center desk drawer and not use it in the 21st Century.
Principal preparation is also part of the woeful state of affairs. Most learn how to may be superintendents some day. They are NOT taught to be instructional leaders. Ethics segments are not found in personnel classes. AND most educational administration departments break out in a system wide rash if you mention curriculum and instruction. Research in effective methods of instruction is abandoned for what is called accountability. Curriculum revision is less revision and more moving the deck chairs on the Titanic.
Charter schools are more commercial than innovative. Innovation is abandon to either please educators or parents. Yet, blessed are those who figure how to do both and effectively.
I’ve heard the word reform for 30 plus years. We don’t want change. We want status quo which costs less. AND our students lose EVERY TIME!!!
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Amen!
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Thank you, thank you, thank you! As a grandparent of two children in elementary school that I have care of, I have been confused, concerned and down right pissed off that my 3rd grade grandson was coming home upset because he was afraid he would mess up his BUBBLE on a stupid test. He needed to practice his bubble! WHAT????? SO, you have so eloquently spoken alot of things that are in my heart about the education my grandchildren are getting. Tell me how to fix it, tell me what to do, who’s throat to go at. I am sick of my grandchildren being taught to a test that determines their teacher’s pay raise. There are sooo many great teachers out there. What in the hell are we doing to them?
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Parents and grandparents need to get loud. We need to organize our PTAs to speak out about more than fundraisers. Organize and engage your district leadership. These are elected positions. If they want your vote, they play by your rules.
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Thank you, Kris. I have been saying this for years. Parents and grandparents need to get on board and make a difference. There has never been a more dangerous time for teachers, children and the educational system across this country. Teachers and children need your support! Thanks again!
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So true Kris, things will not change until parents and citizens get involved in the education of their children and not just fundraisers, parties, etc. PLEASE get informed and vote for candidate who REALLY care about the future of education.
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Kris
You are right on the MONEY!!
Everything you said is the absolute truth!!
Parents do not have a clue as to the Chaos that exists in this Testing State..
If you write to June, she will forward it to your county and you are in big trouble..
You have said all that I want to say but could not..
The parents will have to take control.
I took my children out of the Public Schools in NC and my students want to know why??
You said it all!!
They are doing great in the Private Shool
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I imagine a lot of teachers wish they could write similar letters. It’s a shame that our country has let the educational system crumble to ruins. Teachers need our support. They need to be given the tools they need to properly educate our children. Our teachers need to be appreciated and valued for their efforts and paid fair wages for their time. The children are our future and it is everyone’s responsibility to ensure that our children learn, grow and blossom into educated, compassionate, well rounded, responsible, productive members of our society. For anyone reading this post – Don’t just shake your head and say yes it’s a shame. Do something today. Drop off school supplies at a local classroom, Write a thank you note to your child’s teacher, Send a gift card for dinner out, movie tickets, offer to occasionally volunteer in the classroom, fix a meal for your favorite teacher, when you pack your child’s lunch pack a second one for the teacher, send a pizza to the school for the teachers lunch room, drop off Starbucks coffee and muffins in the morning, Jamba Juice, Fandango bucks, Amazon gift card, grocery store gift card, office supplies gift cards. The point is do something and do it today! Either give of your time or write a nice thank you, or send some supplies for the classroom or some gift gesture of appreciation. EVEN if you do not personally know a teacher, or have a child in school. Find a school in your area, then look at their website and pick a teacher randomly to support. Our teachers need us.
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The pain I feel knowing that I will be forced to quit teaching because politicians have destroyed our educational system is devastating. I do not know how long I will be able to hang on.
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After 35 years of teaching and retiring this past year, I sadly agree! Too much stress on students, teachers, administrators and parents!
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Welcome, friend. I am so sad to see you join me and many other competent, caring teachers who have left the public schools. I, too, have two children (one in middle and one in elementary) who I still hover over, teach, and try to protect from the tests and crap they will have to contend with. Too broke for much in the way of choices (after seven years teaching in the ‘best’ school district in NC), I, too, am simply glad to have left, recovered my health (mental and physical) and am still around to watch over my own kids. Best of luck to you.
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I know too many educators who want to retire just to get away from the madness of testing in our schools. “Teachers’ working conditions are children’s learning conditions.”
They are taking all of the fun out of teaching, which takes all the fun out of learning. This saddens me.
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Your story is so familiar. My husband graduated during the first years of the education funding crisis in Oregon. Twelve positions opened statewide. We were lured to Alabama with the hope of a job. He got one. And now…I know he has voiced every single one of your complaints. More meaningless paperwork and less time actually educating children. It’s pathetic what has become of our education system.
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Please stand together against the system. I visited a mathematics professors’s lecture once about how to teach Math to young children. Her video was wonderful and it showed children working together to find 5 different ways to solve a Math problem. The point of her story was wonderful. After the lecture I told her my story.
Our teacher overemphasized rote learning and drilling of math facts. My kid began to cry every time I said, “It’s time to practice math facts.” In class they had 2 mins to get as many problems right before they could move on the next set of math facts, etc., etc., This stressed my kid out to no end. (It only got worse as my kids grew older.)
After the lecture I asked the speaker how to combat this kind of teaching. If a school or an administration has adopted a way to teach how can I, as a parent, combat this. She suggested withdrawing my kid from school. That option is not always available. So I asked her to suggest another route. She said the answer resided with the teachers. “As a teacher I would shut my door, teach my kids and if asked by administration I would say I’m teaching the kids Math. That’s what you hired me for. That’s what I’m doing. As a teacher she must stand up for what she was trained to do and if that meant shutting her door and bucking the system then she should do just that.”
I live in a foreign country now and send my kids to a privately funded American type school. I am fortunate. I am terrified of returning to the US. My dad and extended family would love me to return but the best education for my children is outside the US. We have a system at this school that if a child does poorly on a test score (Summative Assessment) he can relearn the material and retake the test. The point is not in the score but whether she understands the material.
Another time my child was sick leading up to ERBs and I called the teacher to say I was concerned about her performance on the test but that she was well and I should send her to school. But maybe I should keep her home instead of making her take the test.
The teacher and principal told me the test was just an indicator for me to gauge how my child was doing relative to others and was not very critical. It carried as much weight as I was willing to give it. If she missed the test there would not be a retake day so it was up to me to decide whether to send my kid to school that day but it would not impact her performance for the year in any way.
Imagine that. If America can not fix it’s education system I intend to stay overseas until they graduate.
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Thank you for your dedication and incredible bravery! As a victim of NC public schools even before the onslaught of standardized tests, I knew no child of mine would ever be left behind — in those institutions. My heart breaks for the talented and dedicated educators who suffer through lack of leadership, lack of vision — and of course, low pay, etc. And how will we answer to the students? Thank you for taking a stand…Just wishing there was some way to change this culture of scarcity and inane standards to uplift and creativity and joy…
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I’m really not sure why you complain so much. A person said earlier that they quit ten years ago for the exact reason. This just shows you didn’t do any research before you left. If you had, then you also must have weighed the pros and cons and came to the conclusion that it was worth the risk. When actually faced with the problem in a real life situation you tuck tail and run and blame the system for being worse. I do not agree with the testing. I had a dear friend from school, not able to graduate because of a single subject on an assessment exam that he took 7 times and failed by a near 3 points 4 times, but at the same time I also watched the broken hearted teachers pick them selves up and persevere. Suck it up and do work. It’s a tough life. Deal with it. It could be worse. Let me know how you feel in a few months when you apply at toys r us again.
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You are mean and nasty. Go to confession.
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