The recent MetLife survey of the American teacher showed a high level of demoralization among the Marion’s teachers. For those wondering why, read on.
John Louis Meeks Jr. Is a Florida social studies teacher. He is a veteran of the U.S. Air Force. He wrote an open letter to Governor Scott to protest the disrespect shown to the state’s teachers. He points out that the Starr’s evaluation system makes no sense.
Governor Scott, please listen to Mr. Meeks:
Dear Governor Scott,
I have been teaching gifted social studies for over ten years in Florida and never have I experienced the type of fear and intimidation that I have endured either in my service to our nation in the Air Force or in any other capacity in which I have worked.
We would like to believe that education reform is designed to lift our students to a higher level of learning to best prepare them for citizenship and careers.
We would like to believe that the work of our state’s leaders is to truly improve our schools to ensure that educators are doing the work necessary to best serve our state and its future.
I take issue, however with the manner in which we evaluate our educators to gauge their work to teach our students and future leaders. The CAST evaluation system, in my opinion is grievously flawed because the value added formula actually ignores the value of the work that educators do every day.
First of all, the time that administrators are charged with observing educators is limited to small windows of opportunity to grade teachers according to a rubric that is well-intentioned but restricts them to what they actually see in the classroom. In this finite amount of time, principals and their designees only are allowed to record what they see and hear. I find fault in this because it provides no real context with which to judge classroom performance.
For example, a principal can walk into a classroom and can see that a teacher is sitting down to take attendance. This is behavior that is frowned upon as teachers are expected to be walking around the room and constantly hovering over their students.
For example, a principal can walk into a classroom and hear students talking about something other than their work. It is the teacher’s fault that they are not limiting their conversation to the work at hand. For example, a principal can walk into a classroom and observe that students are cleaning up the room to prepare for the next class. There is no instruction going on, therefore there is no learning going on.
And, once the administrator leaves, whatever flawed impression he or she has of the classroom is written in stone. It is because of this that I believe that CAST was designed to be a gotcha to drum out allegedly bad teachers for what may have been an anomaly in their performance that includes 180 days of constant work to help our students.
The darker side of CAST is the assessment end of the evaluation which is tied to student learning gains. Even with value added factors, this is a set-up in my opinion. The value of student learning gains cannot and should not be forced to rely on students’ performance on tests only.
Based on this metric, I am the second-worst social studies teacher in my school and this will become public knowledge when these CAST scores become public record in accordance with state law……
I am disappointed because I am often the last person to leave work each day because there is always something else to work on or complete and it is often the custodians who remind me when they are locking up the school. I am disappointed because there is no metric for the dedication that I have for my students and my school, and yet there is plenty of punishment lined up for me is I fail to make the grade for my students.
This is not the usual ranting of a lazy union flunky who wants to rest on his laurels. There have been days when I was sick and still went to work because it was my ultimate responsibility to serve the public. There have been days when I went to work on sick days to collect work to complete in my sick bed. Instead of appreciation, the usual condemnation that I receive from critics continues because I am a victim of the trite stereotypes that we are all bad teachers who get what is coming to us.
You might wonder why I do not leave for greener pastures. I should have left after being hospitalized for two weeks last year. I should have left after dealing with students who did not want to do any work no matter what incentives, prizes and rewards I offer. I should have left after my test scores remained stagnant in spite of all of my most sincere efforts. I stay, however, because I trust that our state’s leaders will finally hear what our educators have to say about CAST and its unintended consequences. I keep teaching because I know that a better day for education is ahead and because there will always be a better day for our students if we all believe that we are working as a team for public education.
Sincerely,
//signed//
John Louis Meeks, Jr.
Educator

John-did your students show low growth because they are gifted and therefore already at the top end of the test scores? A teacher in my district had a student that scored a PERFECT score on the state assessment one year and the next year the student missed the perfect score by 2 points. So…..the student showed “low” growth, even though the score fell in the pass+ category. How is this a fair way to evaluate teachers? I, too, stay in education only with the hope that things will get better. Not only for teachers, but also for the children we teach.
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This teacher is talking about the teacher observation system adopted by Duval (Jacksonville) County Public Schools, FL. Thirty-one of the state’s 67 school districts adopted the evaluation system produced by Robert Marzano. Many of the teachers using this system are equally outraged over the micromanaging of instructional practices this system creates. There are lots of disparities between the observation results conducted by administrators within the same school as well as administrators in different schools. It is so bad that administrators are now visiting schools in groups and observing teachers together to see if they give consistent scores to the same teacher. It is not happening. A group of ten administrators observe the same teacher teaching the same lesson and come up with six different results.
I know they can’t openly admit this, but I think many administrators hate this system just as much as we teachers do.
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This teacher’s letter speaks for the majority of us across the country and anyone, teacher or not, who is a true educator.
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This teacher, with his advanced credentials, experience, and investment in the pension, is just the sort that the educrats want to jettison. In that respect, the evaluation system is working perfectly.
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Can someone please tell me what Arne Duncan taught?
Marge
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The Dunk Funcan taught some hoops to the Obomber!
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I’ve missed your irreverence. :0) Welcome back!
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Google his biography: he played basketball in Australia from 1987-1991 (where he also worked w/some students). Then he headed a non-profit foundation & opened “the most successful school in Chicago” (that no one’s ever heard of). Then he became the CEO of CPS. Then he was appointed Sec’y of Ed.
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Excuse me, but you need to also Google Ariel Community Academy (the school that Arne helped found). See how big (er, I should say small) the classes are. It’s a magnet school. It’s name used to be Shakespeare.
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Dr. Marzano’s evaluation tool in my county in Florida is a one size fits all. In my school the school psychologist, the occupational therapist, the physical therapist, the speech and language pathologists, and every teacher is evaluated with the same tool and same exact expectations by law. The tool is black and white so that the person evaluating is to evaluate only what he or she hears or sees during that time no matter where you are in the lesson. For example, if I’m developing understanding and not to the required part of my lesson to ask a higher level thinking skill question (even though I’m working with students on the participatory level, what we used to call profoundly mentally handicapped) I am marked down. I am required to use: specific wording, specific scales, and other protocols.
I have an endorsement for students with severe cognitive disabilities yet since we are required by law to follow the Dr. Marzano evaluation I have to change what I teach and how I teach. The Dr. Marzano website has lots of resources for general education teachers and nothing for special education teachers for students as low as mine in a center school. I’d be happy to follow what he says if it were research based for students like mine. The only recent research I find is for one to one teaching in a classroom with a teacher, two paraprofessionals, and four students. At my school the classes are burgeoning and getting bigger. I’d love to have the powers that be come and demonstrate for us and get the desired results required.
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Marzano is a sold out edupreneur, plain and simple.
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Add Danielson to that list.
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Yes. Charlotte saw the zeroes on the check. I don’t think she started out that way… she got hijacked by the $$$$$. Result the same. Sold out.
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Well, Duh …
Telling the corporate raiders that teachers are becoming demoralized is just a way of telling them that their plans are working.
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i completely agree with mr. meeks.
i, too, had the 2nd lowest VAM score at my school. i taught two advanced classes where it is nearly impossible to show growth as these are the students who already are already getting 4s and 5s. (44 students)
then i had 35 ESE students who made limited gains.
that means that my VAM score was based on the remaining 27 students. the regular kids, as they are called.
does this seem right?
and as for marzano…my administrator evaluated my classroom one day and told me i was teaching a benchmark that no longer existed. gave me a score of beginner teacher. i found and printed the benchmark and proved that yes, it is a current benchmark. but does the evaluation change? NO! twenty years of perfect or near perfect evaluations and then this?
just an fyi: the rumor in my county is that if you are 20 years or more into the system, they are looking to eliminate you to bring in young and cheaper.
perhaps it is time for a career change…
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Why is it necessary to obscure the intent of your message with the mocking of Union members? The vast majority of us are as dedicated and unwavering in our commitment to our students and their learning as you.
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I apologize for making it appear that I am anti-union. What I meant to say is that I am not the ‘stereotypical’ union member who detractors are quick to attack for being allegedly ‘lazy’ and ‘unproductive.’ As a member of the teachers union since 2002 and the grandson of a union representative, I appreciate what the labor movement has done for me and my colleagues. I sincerely apologize for not making it more clear in my post. Thank you for bringing that up.
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So sorry that you entered the profession on a down note. It has not always been this way. I hate that all the moneyed forces are lined up against teachers and public education but we must continue to fight. We won’t win them all but we will win utimately because we are in it because we believe in public education and our students,
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This is so true in NC as well. As to driving out experienced teachers, data shows experience trumps everything, so the children will lose, as the strategy is working. Retirement won’t need to be funded. None of the 20 somethings who teach will ever make it to 65.
Sent from my iPad
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Soon there will be no veteran teachers.
And I don’t believe that the 20-somethings I see will not tolerate the abuse that the career teachers have endured in the last 30 years. No way.
It’s a different world. Maybe they’re just smarter than we were. That’s probably it.
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Oops. Double negative. I don’t believe they WILL tolerate…
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It’s not even that they won’t tolerate it, Cheryl. They won’t be able to stay–teachers will not be given tenure, & they will become at-will employees–any excuse to let them go will do, as due-process rights (tenure) will be out of their reach. I was just talking to an experienced teacher in a nearby district: they weren’t hiring any new teachers w/more than 2 years of experience.
And they also were not keeping new people past two years, as well. The future is clear: there is no future.
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As a teacher’s aide in Alachua County, I witnessed superb teachers. One moved six hours up the road for much better pay. It bothers me that a teacher has to make a plea to the likes of Rick Scott. Besides the flaws Mr. Meeks speaks of in the Cast evaluation is the fact that biased thinking is in all of us, so the evaluation score and how well a teacher is liked go hand in hand. Once again, whatever the agenda is, has nothing to do with benefiting the traditionally trained teacher or the students.
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Marzano gets far less scorn than he deserves. It still blows my mind to see relatively intelligent people arguing that small differences in things that students don’t even pay attention to will translate into anything besides making teaching a miserable job.
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Marzano – trying to quantify the unquantifiable work of teaching…Any work done with human beings is multifaceted and changing; based on their unique needs and qualities. Good teachers know and understand this. My favorite assumption of Marzano and his research is that if you do x,y,and z, the result will always be a. The result may be “a” for a few of your children, but most often it is actually something all together different.
Marzano’s initial research has become bastardized and twisted in an attempt to package and sell a dream that education can become neat and tidy. IT HAS NEVER BEEN NEAT OR TIDY. Educating children is a messy and wonderful business – an art. We need to get back to an understanding of this.
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I am a teacher with 20 years experience. I once felt my job to be a calling and felt I had been blessed with a gift. I now feel robotic, trapped, and I no longer feel I am trusted to rely on those instincts that once drove my instruction so well. Will the “experts” ever stop treating us so condescendingly? My choices are to continue living an existence in which I feel enslaved, or take an early retirement and live the rest of my life as an insolvent former educator.
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