Colorado has one of the most punitive teacher evaluation systems in the nation, passed in 2010. It was written by State Senator Michael Johnston, ex-TFA. Contrary to the conclusions of the American Statistical Association, the American Educational Research Association, and eminent researchers such as Linda Darling-Hammond and Edward Haertel of Stanford, Colorado’s SB 191 bases 50% of teachers’ evaluation on student test scores. This creates tremendous pressure to narrow the curriculum only to what is tested and to teach to the test. Senator Johnston vainly insisted that his legislation would produce “great teachers” and “great schools.”
Pauline Hawkins, a teacher in Colorado, explains here why she is resigning as a teacher in Colorado. The environment she leaves with regret was created by George W. Bush, Arne Duncan, and Michael Johnston.
Hawkins writes:
Dear Administrators, Superintendent, et al.:
This is my official resignation letter from my English teaching position.
I’m sad to be leaving a place that has meant so much to me. This was my first teaching job. For eleven years I taught in these classrooms, I walked these halls, and I befriended colleagues, students, and parents alike. This school became part of my family, and I will be forever connected to this community for that reason.
I am grateful for having had the opportunity to serve my community as a teacher. I met the most incredible people here. I am forever changed by my brilliant and compassionate colleagues and the incredible students I’ve had the pleasure of teaching.
I know I have made a difference in the lives of my students, just as they have irrevocably changed mine. Teaching is the most rewarding job I have ever had. That is why I am sad to leave the profession I love.
Even though I am primarily leaving to be closer to my family, if my family were in Colorado, I would not be able to continue teaching here. As a newly single mom, I cannot live in this community on the salary I make as a teacher. With the effects of the pay freeze still lingering and Colorado having one of the lowest yearly teaching salaries in the nation, it has become financially impossible for me to teach in this state.
Along with the salary issue, ethically, I can no longer work in an educational system that is spiraling downwards while it purports to improve the education of our children.
I began my career just as No Child Left Behind (NCLB) was gaining momentum. The difference between my students then and now is unmistakable. Regardless of grades or test scores, my students from five to eleven years ago still had a sense of pride in whom they were and a self-confidence in whom they would become someday. Sadly, that type of student is rare now. Every year I have seen a decline in student morale; every year I have more and more wounded students sitting in my classroom, more and more students participating in self-harm and bullying. These children are lost and in pain.
It is no coincidence that the students I have now coincide with the NCLB movement twelve years ago–and it’s only getting worse with the new legislation around Race to the Top.
I have sweet, incredible, intelligent children sitting in my classroom who are giving up on their lives already. They feel that they only have failure in their futures because they’ve been told they aren’t good enough by a standardized test; they’ve been told that they can’t be successful because they aren’t jumping through the right hoops on their educational paths. I have spent so much time trying to reverse those thoughts, trying to help them see that education is not punitive; education is the only way they can improve their lives. But the truth is, the current educational system is punishing them for their inadequacies, rather than helping them discover their unique talents; our educational system is failing our children because it is not meeting their needs.
I can no longer be a part of a system that continues to do the exact opposite of what I am supposed to do as a teacher–I am supposed to help them think for themselves, help them find solutions to problems, help them become productive members of society. Instead, the emphasis on Common Core Standards and high-stakes testing is creating a teach-to-the-test mentality for our teachers and stress and anxiety for our students. Students have increasingly become hesitant to think for themselves because they have been programmed to believe that there is one right answer that they may or may not have been given yet. That is what school has become: A place where teachers must give students “right” answers, so students can prove (on tests riddled with problems, by the way) that teachers have taught students what the standards have deemed are a proper education.
As unique as my personal situation might be, I know I am not the only teacher feeling this way. Instead of weeding out the “bad” teachers, this evaluation system will continue to frustrate the teachers who are doing everything they can to ensure their students are graduating with the skills necessary to become civic minded individuals. We feel defeated and helpless: If we speak out, we are reprimanded for not being team players; if we do as we are told, we are supporting a broken system.
Since I’ve worked here, we have always asked the question of every situation: “Is this good for kids?” My answer to this new legislation is, “No. This is absolutely not good for kids.” I cannot stand by and watch this happen to our precious children–our future. The irony is I cannot fight for their rights while I am working in the system. Therefore, I will not apply for another teaching job anywhere in this country while our government continues to ruin public education. Instead, I will do my best to be an advocate for change. I will continue to fight for our children’s rights for a free and proper education because their very lives depend upon it.
My final plea as a district employee is that the principals and superintendent ask themselves the same questions I have asked myself: “Is this good for kids? Is the state money being spent wisely to keep and attract good teachers? Can the district do a better job of advocating for our children and become leaders in this educational system rather than followers?” With my resignation, I hope to inspire change in the district I have come to love. As Benjamin Franklin once said: “All mankind is divided into three classes: Those that are immovable, those that are movable, and those that move.” I want to be someone who moves and makes things happen. Which one do you want to be?
Sincerely,
Pauline Hawkins

Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Texas Education and commented:
This letter can be cut and pasted for thousands of teachers across the country.
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How TRAGIC!!! AND, that her letter replicates so many in the teaching “profession” now. Even if teachers “hang on” and try to educate, the fascist top down mind set from myopic, ignorant politicians, sadly some within the “education” field, makes it impossible. I retired 23 years ago when the cry was – how long before you can retire. It has steadily grown worse.
How to fight against it? Dr. Ravitch is leading the fight and people like her. It is not overstating to say that the future of our nation depends on the success of people like this.
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This broke my heart…
We have found our enemy and it is the Republicans (and those masquerading as democrats).
Add this letter of resignation to this article, and watch your blood boil.
RE-SEGREGATION NOW. The article shows in stark colors what it is happening throughout our country, especially in the Red South. And it isn’t about race either. It is about the poor, who happen to present a preponderance of black and brown faces. Texas is not different from Tuscaloosa today. Neither is New Jersey.
http://www.propublica.org/article/segregation-now-full-text
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This is why I fought so hard against SB191 while in the legislature, and why I am determined to go back and repeal it.
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http://www.shreveporttimes.com/viewart/20140416/NEWS0401/140416012
I’m curious how ed reformers continue to defend TFA’s 5 training when the US DOE is pushing this, from Delaware:
“Senate Bill 51 raises the bar for teacher preparation programs by:
Requiring candidates to have either a 3.0 grade point average, be in the top half of their most recent graduating class, or pass a test of their academic skills.
After they complete their classes, teacher candidates will have to pass a test of their knowledge of the subjects they plan to teach, demonstrate their teaching skills and complete a 10 week classroom residency (at minimum) supervised by a mentor.
The Delaware Department of Education and the teacher preparation programs themselves will monitor the performance of their graduates in the classroom and data on the programs will be reported to the public.”
So which is it? Do teachers need more training, or is 5 weeks sufficient? Isn’t signing contracts with TFA a contradiction of a USDOE push for higher standards for new teacher entry?
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Chaira,
Could you link to Senate Bill 51? The quoted section says nothing about having a degree in education. Is that a requirement?
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Sure.
http://openstates.org/de/bills/147/SB51/
It looks like an amendment to, not a deletion/replacement for, their current licensing scheme which appears to already include an alternative route.
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I’m genuinely curious how long the disconnect can go on. This is Kopp:
“Ravitch is also wrong to suggest that Teach For America corps members aren’t effective. A significant body of rigorous research shows that they are more effective than other beginning teachers and, on average, equally or more effective than veteran teachers. Still, I am the first to admit — as I do in my book — that “the bell curve of effectiveness within our corps is still too wide” and “our teachers are still not, on average, changing the trajectory of their students.”
How can the federal government be promoting more rigorous entry requirements for career teachers while subsidizing TFA?
Will TFA’s have to undergo the “10 week classroom residency with a mentor”?
I just think this whole thing is becoming completely incoherent.
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FYI,
There is no requirement for a degree in education in GA. As far as I am aware, there never has been.
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AGGGGGGH!
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Chiara,
re: Will TFA’s have to undergo the “10 week classroom residency with a mentor”?
I would think it an improvement if they had to have at least a minor in the subject they teach. To obtain certification, we have to have at least. I have a former student who joined TFA. She was an Econ and Psych major and is somehow considered qualified to teach math.
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Ang,
I’m not sure that a degree in education is a requirement in most states just that you have the courses required for certification. I was not required to have a degree in education in Illinois. I believe the same is true for Vermont and New Hampshire. Anybody else?
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One of the intentions of SB 51 was to regulate teacher education programs. Imagine local legislators knowing better than long established universities how best to prepare teachers.
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What do you think of recently established online MA in education programs?
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2old,
Agree.
That is the point I was trying to make.
Other posters spend a lot of time bashing education degrees, conflating, confounding and confusing what certification means, what is required and what “out of field” means.
Seems very few people think we understand anything, including our own profession.
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It’s all based on the lie teachers are stupid.
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Education reform is the domestic Iraq War of the neo-libs.
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This letter of resignation outlines exactly what is happening in New Mexico over the last three years. Governor Martinez and Secretary of Education Skandera in the last three years have dictatorially forced up the education system all the programs that were forced upon the education system in Florida. Secretary of Education Skandera worked for Jeb Bush. Take it from there. The morale of the Professional Educators is the lowest I have seen in the 34 years I have lived in this state. I served eight years on the second largest Board of Education in New Mexico. I have served on the NM Public Education Commission for eight years. Students are becoming robots. Parents are confused as how to help their children. Things are going to hell in a hand basket educationally in the State of New Mexico. We are following the same trail as Colorado.
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As a teacher of almost 20 years I am kind of getting tired of all of these “registration letters”. Don’t these teachers realize that quitting is EXACTLY what the ed-deform crowd wants them to do? The ed-deformers want a constant churn of young, cheap labor. They want easily manipulated new teachers who will never become vested in a pension. They want teachers who will keep their mouths closed and do what they are told. They don’t want anbody to stir the boat. Most of all, they want QUITTERS. I say stick it out and fight the good fight! Be a thorn in the side of the ed-deform crowd. Never quit. Make the ed-deformers quit.
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Diane, I seem to be weeping a lot lately. I just am so sad for our young, our teachers, and our communities. TY for the good information. I keep wondering how much damage and how long all this awful repression will last. I just don’t understand GREED and so much mean-ness at what cost?
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Career teachers resigning is a desirable feature of the reformist program, not a flaw. Please try not to leave the profession!
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It has been reported that 7% of Wake County (NC) teachers have resigned since July 2013.
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The support that the National Standards (the real ones) said were the responsibility of the administration, are lacking in the schools.
They are responsible for:
a safe,quiet healthy environment, (which means smaller classes, too)
supplying the materials, furniture etc ( I was given rooms where there were no desks, or no blackboards, and one room with missing glass in the window panes, and holes in the wall through which mice an drugs invaded the room;
organizing the programs and staffing that supports the teacher.
Do you see testing anywhere in those standards?
But worse, not only is there no support as required, the administration is permuted to do and ay anything it wishes, because, as Diane and Anthony have pointed out, THERE IS NO ACCOUNTABILITY under the law of the land for DUE PROCESS.
We saw how that worked in the finical debacle.
Teachers are subjected to abuse that no minority would allow… NO wonder they run for their sanity… they are educated professionals working for a pittance because they were CALLED to the profession.
Go to http://WWW.endteacherabuse.org, JUST ONE SITE of many I have listed in earlier comments, and see why teachers leave as fast as they can.
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What do you folks think of this? Is it an alternative to privatization?
“Pittsburgh Federation of Teachers president Nina Esposito-Visgitis said she feels “jealous” when she hears of the progress made at community learning schools in Cincinnati.
Next week, about 30 people from Pittsburgh — including teacher union members, city residents and leaders — will go to a community schools conference in Cincinnati to see whether ideas from there can be brought here.”
Cincinnati went in a different direction from Columbus and Cleveland beginning in 2000. Columbus and Cleveland went full-out charter, but Cincinnati is the highest-performing urban system in Ohio on standardized tests.
Yet, they don’t seem to have any corporate sponsors for their “community schools” idea and I have never seen it discussed on Morning Joe!
Wonder why that is 🙂
Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/news/education/2014/04/02/Pittsburgh-teachers-and-officials-to-explore-community-schools/stories/201404020093#ixzz2zALRbqus
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I believe Joe Nathan has worked with the folks in Cincinnati. Perhaps he can comment.
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It’s interesting, because I have read tons on Cleveland and Columbus in this state, most of it pushed out by the Fordham Institute, but I first read that Cincinnati was the highest performing urban district in the state when I read this:
http://www.communityschools.org/save_the_date__2014_national_forum_.aspx
Cleveland has now been “reformed” three or four times, they’re breathlessly awaiting the latest round of test scores, which they have been doing for a decade, and Cincinnati has been plugging away at this slow and steady approach for more than a decade without a lot of drama and heartache and “disruption”.
Now why wouldn’t that be trumpeted as a success?
I know deBlasio and the other NYC Dem candidates went down there during their campaigns, and now Pittsburgh is going.
Is it an alternative to the Chicago/DC/NO/Tennessee/fill-in-the-state-city approach? 🙂
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If Joe singlehandedly saved Cincinnati he definitely would have told us by now and many times over and over.
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Resigning is just what these “reformers” want. Teachers are notoriously wimpy because they fear they will be written up and fired if they dare speak up.
Because of the extreme power imbalance between teachers and administrators, “reformers” feel perfectly confident they can destroy the teaching profession. Who, after all, is going to speak up?
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I’ve been threatened with my job and my license for speaking up. Am I “wimpy” for backing down? I sure feel like it, but I need the job and I love teaching.
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How sad that this continues16 years after I experienced the same harassment, in the first step in the war on public education…the removal of the genuine voice of the professional educator in the classroom whom they call teacher… which they equate to ‘trained mechanic.”
In 1998 I was the New York State Educator of Excellence, because like you, I had been a wonderful, thoughtful teacher with a proven record (see my resume and writing at Oped where i write now, as I do not have a blog or site,) http://www.opednews.com/author/author40790.html
but I was hounded out in the most lawless of manners, because there is no due process.
I began writing about this abrogation of due process when my iweb site was active, but no one paid attention:
http://www.speakingasateacher.com/SPEAKING_AS_A_TEACHER/No_Constitutional_Rights-_A_hidden_scandal_of_National_Proportion.html
Karen Horwitz put up her site which contains hundreds of stories of teachers who experienced the assault. http://www.endteacher abuse.com, and no one paid attention.
Betsy Combier chronicled the corruption in NYC
http://parentadvocates.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=article&articleID=7534 this is just on elf her sties.
Yet, all those years later they go after teachers like Francesco Portelos, with the same contempt for the law…
http://protectportelos.org/does-workplace-bullying-continues-my-33-hrs-behind-bars/
… as if nothing has changed… because nothing HAS changed…except the veteran teachers are GONE, and testing and charter schools are HERE!
If you have not seen the Grassroots film, do so, and see how it is accomplished in NYC, in this film made 3 years ago… never seen it? Of course.
Hear Lorna Stremcha testify about the lawlessness in Congress.
http://www.youtube.com/all_comments?v=nfNxj-O1DiI
Her story should have been front page news, as the principal set her up to be assaulted, and she proved that — when she sued. Her life saving evaporated because the union in Montana looked the other way, and the courts are expensive. She worked with the Montana Senator to bring legislation to end bullying in the educational workplace. Never heard of her? Of course. She writes about the top-down takeover what she experienced in her soon t one published book.
Your story makes me so sad because it is the same for all of us, and the only thing one hears is the insane propaganda that appears in today’s NY Times, http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/17/education/competing-views-of-teacher-tenure-are-on-display-in-california-case.html?emc=edit_tnt_20140417&nlid=50637717&tntemail0=y
The title COMPETING Views of teacher tenure” says it all. There is NO competing view, and the paper is not balancing a genuine argument by publishing such outrageous and unproven opinion. THIS is not journalism, and it is the MEDIA (owned by six corporate entities controlled by the oligarchs) that has hid the truth from the public while publishing a national narrative about those bad teachers who need to be evaluated…. out the door!
Says the NY Times:
“Even if funding and time in school are equal, students still cannot be assured of equal educational opportunities unless they have equal access to effective teachers,” Mr. Boutrous wrote in the final brief, submitted last week.”
It is all the teacher’s fault, but the truth is YOUR truth, that the most effective teachers have been hounded out… over on hundred thousand veteran teachers are GONE, and the novice teachers that replace them leave in 3 to 5 years… keeps pension and benefits down, and THAT is why you are gone, and so am I.
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Correction the NAPTA site which tells hundred’s of teacher storied is http://www.endteacherabuse.org.
Go there and weep
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They were telling the truth about teaching long before the public became aware of it.
Until people have done the job, they simply have no concept at all of what it entails and how little power teachers really have.
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The saddest part of this story is that the attack on teachers came from both Democrats and Republicans. It is obvious the Dem party still embraces this garbage by the way Cuomo buddied up with Wall Street. When will teachers finally just walk out? I def. will never vote for anyone who backs the corporatization of America’s schools
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It took “Democrats” like Cory Booker and Barack Obama, both of whom have very dubious backgrounds in education, to infiltrate the African American community in order to poison it against public schools and unions. Booker is an outright tool of the far right Bradley Foundation, while Obama was involved in the pro-charter Joyce Foundation. Neither one had any business whatsoever in politics.
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Veteran teachers should hold on as long as possible, especially if employed in schools with sympathetic administrators. Veterans have their own “disruptive genius” as NY is finding out with its latest proposal to hire teachers to fix their deficient “modules.” Previously, they hired “vendors” to write curriculum, but now realize there is a disconnect between vendors and the classroom. Most of us never thought that “disruptive ” education would mean classical education. Math veterans in particular, hang on. our students and communities need you.
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Mission Accomplished!!!
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So very weary of those trying to make this entire issue the “baby” of any political party.
It’s a class issue.
And to most of those crying loudest about this: Arne Duncan has a boss- who apparently is well pleased with his work.
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How about a little salt in the wound.
Denver wants to hire illegal aliens to teach. Read about how DPS is activly working with Teach for America to accomplish this. At first I thought this was a spoof, an Onion article. I am just speechless right now.Anger has not set in yet , just unbelief in how .., forget it. It,s past time for a revolution. People need to storm the political offices with torches and pitchforks.
http://www.9news.com/story/news/education/2014/04/10/dps-undocumented-immigrants-teachers/7549533/
Remember 15-20 years ago when congress cut medicaid? I watched as mass protest erupted and old blue haired laidies angrily beat picket signes against politicians’ cars. Soon afterward congress repealed and reversed their idiotic uninformed policy.
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bob the science guy.. this hiring of TFA’s who were illegal immigrants is really just a corporate PR ploy to pull at the heart strings of where American sentiments lie at this time – to help honest, illegal immigrants who seek to better themselves. I think the corporate “ed reformers” hope for backlash against this hiring so they can brand the non corporate ed reform folk as anti immigrant if they do not agree to promoting TFA in this way. Truth be told TFA should be called out on this… find out who their PR firm is and show the REAL DEAL of why they are doing this.. it is neither for the benefit of our nation’s students nor for the benefit of illegal immigrants…
Come on now “corporate ed people” is the public really to believe that we either have to choose 1- TFA/illegal immigrant teachers or 2- illegal immigrant bashing/”status quo” teaching … This is not a valid choice at all!
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Whether undocumented or not, alien or citizen, immigrant or non-immigrant, only licensed credentialed teachers should be teaching children in public schools. . . . .. to do otherwise is a disservice and an attack against democracy . . . .
This should not be about immigrants, who are innocent. This should be only about qualifications. . . . .
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But it is an example of TFAs mission to destroy exoerienced veteran teachers and replace them with newbies. Why aren’t they supporting teachers who want to pursue teaching as a career?
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AGGGGGH!
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I totally agree the mayor wants cheap paid teachers and teachers who do not stand up for them selves.This will only lead to bad teaching which is really bad for the kids.
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Please American fellows read this:
http://indignez-vous-indignacion.blogspot.mx/p/english.html
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