A teacher writes to explain how life in the classroom differs from his earlier life in another field:
I worked in industry for 15 years before switching careers and moving into education. I can honestly say I work harder as a teacher than I did in my job in the communications industry.
I do make comparable pay to my previous job now although it has taken 20 years of service to do it. There were some lean years when I started as an educator. I get paid for 9 months of work and it gets spread out over 12 months. I have yet to actually see “3 months” off. I may, if lucky, squeeze about 4-5 weeks off where I’m not responsible for something directly related to teaching or keeping my professional certification so I can keep my job.
That’s what I had in my previous job after 15 years. I could take my vacations when I wanted to then. I can only take my vacations between mid June and mid August now. I had a health plan that I paid into in my previous job that was very similar to the one I have at my current school. I had a retirement account through a large investment company which I paid into and the employer matched it. I was evaluated once per year in my previous job and had the option to join a union but was not required. I signed a contract each year which I had to negotiate with my immediate superior and the corporate lawyers. That was not easy and I got eaten alive on a few occasions by their New York lawyers. I was evaluated by my superior strictly on my performance in my job and how he as a professional in the same field thought I did.
If I had to base my pay and job security on one test given to a group of 7th and 8th graders who knew nothing about how I did my job, I would have left sooner. I watch my students take some of the state mandated tests and cringe when I see them drawing dot to dot puzzles on a scantron or sleeping during a timed portion of the test. That’s supposed to be a fair evaluation of my performance? No parent, no adminstrator, no other teacher will see that student’s indifference because I’m the one proctoring the test and I can’t influence them in my room while they are testing. They will only see the final numbers or the media spin on the scores.
I think we as professional educators can contribute in a positive way to improving our profession and not trying to excuse away the questionable parts. Our product isn’t perfect yet but we continue to improve on it and it will happen if we don’t have to put up with profiteers and politicians trying to cut the legs out from under us. We can’t do it if we have our ability to negotiate take away or if we have to negotiate with people who know nothing about what it is like to be in front of a classroom full of adolescents everyday. We are professionals. We know our craft as well, if not better, than a politician or a boardmember who was given the position. I work in a state where the legislature seems to have a vendetta against educators.
They have their high paid superpack working to help them stay in office and keep all their perks, which I also pay for. While the union I belong to helps me keep my job and some of the benefits, which as a tax payer I also pay for. But according to the politicians I’m over paid, under worked, and don’t deserve any benefits for the sacrifices I make to do my job in a professional manner. Several politicians who fit that description too. I didn’t go into education to get rich and 70K per year is by no means rich, especially compared to some of our elected officials.
The Chicago teachers deserve the terms they have asked for and the respect that should be given to them. In other countries, it is expected that students thank the teacher each day after class for taking the time to teach them. If we instill that value in our students about their teachers instead of publicly demeaning them, just maybe we could fix some of the problems and indifference that seem to be dragging our kids down and keeping us from being viewed as the best educational system in the world.

Many years ago, I had a student named Sadman in my 7th grade English class whose family moved to the USA from Iraq.
At the end of every single class, for 185 days, he would say, “Thank you Mrs. _____ for that lesson. Have a good day.”
I will never forget him.
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I love that…we need to be thankful, raise thankful children and teach kids to be thankful. It’s not a conditioned response that is very much lacking in many.
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THANK YOU!!! I always wondered if doctors, or lawyers, or engineers, or other businesspeople, would appreciate *my* input at their annual evaluations, even though I know *nothing* about their profession. Also – would they appreciate my saying that “they’re all alike – we can just replace one with another, cheaper one,” the way my school board members have? How can these people, who also need to feel appreciated by their organizations, espouse this type of indifference toward teachers? Especially when WE are asked to make each student feel special? How, really, does this work?
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70K? I make 40K after 29 years in education!
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I make $ 49, 000 after 16 years in. That’s Elementary school where we teach every subject…9 subjects. Plus we teach shoe tying in all grades, hygiene, manners, problem solving, computer use, bilingual students, make judgements about abuse and neglect, nevertheless–we do it with a brand new smile on our faces every day. I may lose my house soon, however. Pay freeze.
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I thouht perhaps i was overreacting when i saw that figure. Eleven years in as a librarian with an MLS and my taxable income was right at $40k for 10 months’ employment. We were frozen for 4 years and then given something like a 1.2% raise while they increased health care, My net gain for one month is $5.00 which goes nowhere close to all the copay hikes in meds and doctor visits.
Another concern that I have from this post is the sleeping that is going on during the test. Why is it allowed? Call the school’s test coordinator and have him or her come down and handle the situation if you are not able to do so. This is definitely a misadministration if it is permitted to continue. A lot of students get drowsy but they are “encouraged” for however many times it takes to remain conscious and complete thier tests.
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As a school administrator, I applaud the difficult job teachers perform each day. I am grateful for the amazing work of all my staff and the role they play not only in the learning process, but also the social and emotional development. The volital political climate that we are all experiencing across the country is a strategy to deflect away from the real problem we dealing with in our society. To make the changes we need, the politicians would have to look in the mirror and take responsibility. They are the ones that could put policy in place to protect America’s children, but they turn a blinds eye and start blaming educators and administrators for not doing our jobs.
The achievement gap starts way before students begin Early Headstart or Kindergarten. Our politicians don’t have the courage to stand on principle and seek the cause of our challenges, they keep using the same model of reacting, blaming, and punishing. There are not very many of us out in society that can’t look back and name a teacher that made a significant impact on our lives. Degrading teachers publically and grading schools with letter grades, is political grandstanding at it’s worst. No Child Left Behind…..sounds good, horible policy. Race to the Top….sounds good, horrible policy. High stakes standardized tests….sounds good, but is based on ideology, not research.
High stakes testing is an ideology hat defines a student’s self worth and becomes the gatekeeper who decides who gets to move forward and who is rejected and denied access to opportunity. Now we aren’t just talking bad policy, we are shattering lives, sucking hope away from those who have gone the distance, but one test score denies them further progress. Who gets hurt? Those that have the most to lose….our most vulnerable students. We begin to start the great divide….between the haves and the have nots.
In my own state, I did a comparison using the same standards that have become policy to grade educators and I applied them to our legislators and their duties. I didn’t do it to be mean spirited, I did it to show the hyprocacy in their judgements. Interesting, using the same model, our legislators failed in every areas that addressed their responsibility to support education. We will have this non-collaborative relationship as long as we have non-educators writing educational policy without talking to teachers or visiting the schools they are grading through a calculation behind office doors.
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“We will have this non-collaborative relationship as long as we have non-educators writing educational policy without talking to teachers or visiting the schools they are grading through a calculation behind office doors.”
You are so correct.
Non-educators will continue to exploit public education until such acts are declared illegal.
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Part of my summer will be spend sending invitations to local and state officials to come to my school and spend one week (five school days) in my classroom. It will certainly be a lively time, full of 9-12 graders studying world history, international relations, US history, and sociology. I’m wondering how many will actually accept the invitation? Who might come visit with an open mind and heart, not with an agenda that needs validation?
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And by “spend” I mean “spent.”
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I must be lucky: in the public high school where I teach, many of my students do thank me every day. We’re not, of course, a typical public school, but we’re not a magnet or exam school — just the only public high school in a fairly small suburban town. It’s great to feel appreciated when I read all these stories from elsewhere.
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We should have a whole section in the daily newspapers dedicated to free commentary on education issues. Reporters have nothing on educators in the classrooms. THANK YOU jrsporleder for being Ann administrator who DOES understand and support teachers. What are we going to do?
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Where do you teach? Can’t be Indiana. Legislators have ruined it for everyone here.
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I still think the reformers and/or people thinking up policy and cure-all formulas are avoiding actually working with kids. I wonder how different schools could have been right now if all the people who have shaped these huge reforms would have just gone into the schools as they were, rolled up their sleeves, spent some time instructing and investing in some children, maybe dipped into their pockets to help make a project work, sat on a few committees with some teachers to help problem solve in the building . . . taken a workshop to find out how to integrate technology into instruction in a meaningful way, had lunch with a couple teachers, hel
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Helped with the bus line or carpool line, maybe made a phone call to a community business person to get a program sponsored at the school, given a ride to a parent who couldn’t get to the school for a conference, attended a meeting with local cops about which gangs are prevalent in the neighborhood, written a note of congratulations to a student after a sports event, science fair or concert.
What is up? What happened to that kind of leadership and involvement?
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Agreed. Local and state legislators who haven’t spent a day in a classroom since the days they attended school should be MANDATED to do so. But not the way some of them do now, where they wear their fancy suits, and the school puts on a dog-and-pony show. I’m talking “Undercover Boss” style, where nobody realizes who the person is, as they are just the “substitute” teacher for the day. Picture Arne Duncan wearing a temporary ID sticker with the name “Mr. Jones,” subbing in a 7th-grade urban middle school. Think most kids would recognize him without the cavalcade? I don’t. It would be a good lesson for Mr. Duncan. What do you say, Arne? You and your Ivory Tower Suits up for the challenge?
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In what reality do we live where a non-profit educator (my new tern for a public school teacher) is the enemy? How are these selfish, greedy, non-profit educators destroying the stability of the public school system? How are they bankrupting district budgets? In what reality do we live where non-profit educators spend their 10 weeks off vacationing in their lavish summer home in the Hamptons? Require teachers to pay for post secondary education to become highly qualified, but then continue to cut their pay and benefits once this status is achieved. I didn’t think the middle class was the enemy.
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