A remarkable meeting took place in the Manhattan offices of Teach for America.
TFA leadership sat down with leaders of United Students Against Sweatshops, a group that has visited campuses to warn students against joining TFA.
This article that appears in “In These Times” describes the meeting. To see the links and read the article in full, open it.
It begins:
Dani Lea, a sophomore at Vanderbilt University, believes that Teach for America (TFA) teachers in her high school in Charlotte, North Carolina, were detrimental to her learning experience and for those around her.
Upon hearing this, TFA co-CEO Matthew Kramer said, “That’s not our lived experience.” Lea responded, “That was my lived experience.”
The volley took place during an unusual open meeting at TFA’s midtown Manhattan headquarters November 13 between United Students Against Sweatshop (USAS) activists and TFA’s top leadership, which offered the meeting after a widespread USAS campaign against the organization that includes visiting college campuses to question the education organization’s projected image as crusading do-gooders in American public education.
USAS is the country’s largest student labor organization, which has emerged in recent years as a serious force to be reckoned on labor issues ranging from sweatshop apparel production to campus union drives. The group’s main gripes with TFA and its Peace Corps-like model for American education, bringing college students—most from elite universities—to teach for a short period of time in some of the country’s poorest school districts, are that it is inadequately training teachers and promoting a for-profit, anti-union education reform agenda.
The Nation also recently released TFA documents regarding its response to critical press, adding to TFA’s recent headaches. USAS is demanding that TFA increase teacher training well beyond five-weeks and sever ties with anti-union corporations such as Walmart; USAS groups at universities like Harvard have demands their schools sever ties with TFA.
After offering an olive branch praising the intentions of TFA teachers across the country, USAS activists argued that the organization acts as a convenient staffing organization for municipalities looking to purge their career, unionized teaching staff and switch to a cheaper model based on high turnover.
Eastern Michigan University graduate student Will Daniels said his father, a career teacher in Detroit, was laid off in 2011 as a result of the city’s financial crisis, and said he saw the austerity-minded school authorities forming a marriage of convenience with TFA. The district could hire “three TFA members for the price of my dad,” Daniels said.
Kramer, who along with his co-CEO Elisa Villanueva Beard, patiently and calmly listened to the students, denied that the organization aims to get rid of existing teachers. “We only place people in open positions,” he said. “We do not force people out of a job.”
Beard also rejected the idea that TFA provides a pool of short-term teachers, saying 60 percent of TFA trained teachers stay for a third year and that while surely many young people think of it is a placeholder position before graduate school or some other endeavor, 67 percent stay in education.
But Harvard USAS activist Hannah McShea countered that in some school districts, teacher layoffs are so massive that veterans are laid off along with the rookies and unsatisfactory teachers. “TFA provides a solution of synthetic teachers,” she said. “It is complicit in austerity.”

This would be so beautiful and ironic. A student taught by a TFA who becomes a lawyer and sues their bottoms off. One can only hope, pray and dream for that comeuppance.
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Love it. Gives me hope. Let’s hope this vitality keeps on-keeping on and gathers the energy and money to keep doing this work.
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You know in some Districts teaching is akin to working in a sweatshop.
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I have to say, the most disturbing part of this article is that Randi Weingarten calls TFA temps “educators.”
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Another disturbing part is the fact that Randi said TFA should go back to their “roots”.
TFA’s roots were to place 5-week trained faux-teachers in the nation’s urban schools for only two or three years. After their pathetic stint, those faux-teachers become principals, superintendents or charter school proliferators.
Once again Randi is choosing her political-minded words carefully.
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I concur and with a CEO’s salary I’d expect a tad bit more from Randi. Like say the ability to distinguish between a scab/temp/transient worker and a real teacher who wears the title proudly and personifies it each and every day.
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TFAs pay union dues.
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so much semantic tap dancing:
Kramer: “We only place people in open positions,” he said. “We do not force people out of a job.”
how does he think those positions became available? because the district has an agreement with TFA to bring in their recruits to replace the teachers currently in those jobs.
Beard: 60 percent of TFA trained teachers stay for a third year…while surely many young people think of it (TFA) as a placeholder position before graduate school or some other endeavor, 67 percent stay in education.
“stay in education” rarely means the classroom, teaching kids–it means working for TFA as a recruiter, or getting a job in a neoliberal ed policy “think tank”, creating even more destructive policies, or moving into administrative positions in charter schools, or going to the Broad Academy and landing a superintendent gig in a large urban school system that’s got a partnership with TFA–or landing a job as a legislative aid on Capitol Hill, influencing education policy in Washington.
Good for United Students Against Sweatshops–keep the heat on these people.
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So right. TFA is in such incredible denial about their negative impact on schools.
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You’re too kind to them.
They may or may not be lying to themselves, but they’re certainly lying to the rest of us.
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It seems that TFA is suddenly taking note of the resistance and opposition to their policies and practices TFA must be confronted at every opportunity and shown that they can’t get away with producing poorly educated scab labor to work in schools. Then, we have the massive walk out of Colorado high school students This is quite amazing. Students and parents are beginning to demonstrate and make the ‘deformers’ come to grips with their opposition: students, parents and teachers (with new leadership) are finished being victims of the deformer/corporate scam.
Weingarten is at it again, calling TFA “temps” “educators”. Weingarten must be tossed out of her presidency. That is the next step; it is one more struggle.
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I was pleased to see Edushyster’s work cited in the article.
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At TFA, which must continue sending in temps in order to sustain itself, this will undoubtedly fall on deaf ears. Even still, when Wendy Kopp is asked about TFA, she spins an answer that has absolutely zero relevance to the question. She has gone from saying that TFA’s mission is to put temporary “teachers” into impoverished under-staffed schools where no one wants to take the job (and was that EVER really the case?), to TFA’s mission is to get people into positions in education where they can dictate policy and lead reform. Her pet project has turned into a streamline of turnstile cheap labor for fully 1/3rd of charters, owned by her husband (Kipp).
TFA has no interest in ending “its mission” because to do so, the non-profit that steals our tax dollars via government gifts, on top of which gets paid thousands in placement fees per scab, wouldn’t be able to keep itself in the green, to the tune of Wendy when she was the head, made $400,000 annually. The reformers say teachers earn too much when they are starting at $30,000/$50,000 across the USA? AND, KIPP runs its teachers ragged, to the tune of 11/12 hour long days. Yes, it is sweatshop labor. TFA was never noble. TFA was the snarky idea of an elitist to get her friends some perks. Some join TFA and your loans will be forgiven, housing will be cheap, and Google or some wall streeter will hire you when your term is up. Thanks Wendy–your mission has done nothing but ruin the profession and children’s educations.
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TFA may not force people out of jobs, That is the mission of other groups, to get laws and regulations in place that force teachers out of jobs and set up “alternative pathways of entry” as seems to be happening here in MA.
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What a great development! Remember that most students, even at the elite schools, come from a public school background.
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Let’s get real.
Not rheeal.
Gary Rubinstein, blog, “Guest Post Series. Part One: How Interning for TFA Convinced me of its Injustice” of 2-22-2014.
[start excerpt]
It is now my senior year of college. The woman who had been my manager has moved to another department within TFA, and on August 1st I got my first recruiting email from my Bryn Mawr’s new lead recruiter. She has sent me some of the most worrisome and disturbing emails I have ever received. TFA has responded to the valid, well-articulated articles by former corps members critiquing TFA that went viral several months ago by telling me their words aren’t valid because they weren’t in the right “corps member mindset.” TFA has tried to convince me to support their efforts by buying a shirt from J. Crew. TFA has tried to convince me to apply to the program by bribing me with a holiday gift. I have not responded to these emails.
[end excerpt]
Link: http://garyrubinstein.teachforus.org/2014/02/22/guest-post-series-part-one-how-interning-for-tfa-convinced-me-of-its-injustice/
With all due apologies to Lloyd Lofthouse, I am reminded of the folks I met at anti-war in Vietnam marches that had their fingers firmly ensconced in their Little Red Books [please google if you don’t know what I am referring to].
I still remember one of them dutifully, if somewhat fearfully, rejecting examples where Chairman Mao contradicted himself. “You can’t quote the Chairman against the Chairman.”
Unlike their friendly critics, apparently these folks also had the ‘right corps member mindset.’
Brrrrr…
😎
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I just found this TFA page with discounts and programs that teachers can take advantage of.
http://www.teachforamerica.org/why-teach-for-america/compensation-and-benefits/discounts-for-educators
Some are open to all teachers. (So I bookmarked it. Thanks TFA! 😉 )
Others are just open to TFA teachers:
This one is interesting. It’s a discount for LSAT prep course. (LSAT is a required test for applying to law school, the results of which weigh heavily in whether one gets accepted) is interesting:
—————————-
“Atlas LSAT
“Corps members and alumni get a 20% discount with code TFA2009
—————————–
This basically incentivizes TFA teachers having short stints as teachers—either prior or during their two years. Again, it has a good exclusive to TFA teachers, and not to say… a non-TFA veteran of perhaps decade(s) of teaching who wants to go to law school.
The same applies to Kaplan Test Prep, which has code exclusive to TFA members:
—————————–
“Kaplan
“Corps members get 15% off of classroom and online classes.
“For brief details, log into the graduate school resources page at http://www.teachforamerica.org . Scroll to the bottom of the page for the discount code.”
—————————–
The same applies for the GMAT test prept
——————–
“Manhattan GMAT
“Teach For America alumni can get a 10% discount off any nine-session GMAT prep course.
“Use promotional code TFA09 when enrolling on the phone or online.
———————
And then there’s the “TIME for Kids” (TIME’s “Weekly Reader-ish” publication). TFA teachers get something that non-TFA teachers don’t… a special rate with a special code, of course:
————
“TIME Kids
“20% discount for TFA corps members and alumni! Call 1-800-777-8600.
“Use one of the discount codes below. This discount cannot be redeemed online.
Edition K–1 and Edition 2
DISCOUNT CODE: BPAGP00
Yearly TFA Rate: $3.54 per
student
“Edition 3–4 and Edition 5–6 without Around the World Geography Magazine
DISCOUNT CODE: TKAZBE0
Yearly TFA Rate: $3.54 per student
“Edition 3–4 and Edition 5–6 plus Around the World Geography Magazine
DISCOUNT CODE: TKAZBF8
Yearly TFA Rate: $4.34 per student”
———————————————
Given TIME’s recent cover story (especially that cover), this one is interesting
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Mercedes Schneider, you knocked it out of the park
again with your perusing the on-line chats that TFA
folks have with one another:
There’s nothing said about how to best educate children,
or to improve the educations of children. Much of it
is all about angling for six-figure jobs post-TFA…
either in the lucrative world of “corporate
educatin reform” or in private sector of
Wall Street, etc.
The thing that really jumped out was their
attack on Mark Naison’s article where he says
TFA is no longer welcome in his classroom.
When one TFA chats and belitles Mark
for being upset that Mark’s students
“didn’t make the cut”, that TFA-er means
that Mark is upset that his former students
are being passed over for teaching jobs
in favor of TFA’s.
———————————————–
TFA chatting on-line:
“All I hear from this article is “WAAAHHHHHH”.
He would rather have the bottom third of
Flalafel State College teaching in these schools,
than (TFA) Yale graduates, just because (TFA’s)
choose to go a different route in life after a
couple years in TFA. Oh yeah, and because
his students didnt [sic] make the cut, (get
hired, while TFA teachers were, ) he
is now butt hurt over it.”
——————————————-
Wow… just wow.
However, it’s nice to see this refreshing
honesty (BELOW) from one TFA person who
chimes in about his experiences during TFA’s
their Summer Institute.
He clearly sees through all that is TFA,
but will stick it out because if he quits, there
will be a “stigma” on him that will negatively
impact his post-TFA future.. Note how
he debunks TFA’s “more successful or
as successful as veteran teachers claim”…
it’s all a test prep scame
———————————————–
Another TFA chatting on-line:
“There’s a lot of truth in (Naison’s) article. I’m in the midst of my summer training for TFA now, and the vast majority of my (fellow TFA institute Corp Members-in-training) co-workers don’t REALLY care about these kids. It is a stepping stone, and a guaranteed job, by and large. I also have developed a tremendous amount of animosity towards the organization as a result of what I’ve seen in these past few weeks. This organization is NOT in it for the kids… it’s in it for the ‘Corps Members’ and their experiences.
“They have us teaching summer school after only have ONE WEEK of formal training. These kids are getting REAL grades in subjects that many of the teachers have no prior knowledge of. I, for one, typically learn the subject I’m going to teach the night before the lesson plan is due. It’s disgusting that these kids are used as our guinea pigs. Even the way their success is measured is a damn scam.
“They are given the final exam on the first day and given 30 minutes to complete it. For the remainder of summer school, we are then forced to teach our objectives to this specific test, and it is given again on the last day of classes.”
—————————————————
Here’s where he blows the whistle on TFA’s claims of the growth their teachers get….
and what that “growth” really means.
————————————————–
“It’s disgusting that these kids (public school children taught TFA institute teachers-in-training) are used as our guinea pigs. Even the way their success is measured is a damn scam.
“They are given the final exam on the first day and given 30 minutes to complete it. For the remainder of summer school, we are then forced to teach our objectives to this specific test, and it is given again on the last day of classes.
“(Public school children taught TFA institute teachers-in-training) are given 2 hours at this point to complete it after having been taught essentially identical questions the entire summer. The questions we give on the final is the EXACT SAME as the ones given on that 1st day too. It’s real easy to say that ‘little __________ made a 48 point gain in his subject’ when you have those particular conditions. The shit is sickening.
“I joined to try and do some genuine good, but this organization is no different than many of the private for-profit organizations. At least they’re honest with their intentions. I would leave after seeing this, but there’s too much of a social stigma attached for my professional ambitions to do it (i.e. quit TFA). smh.”
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Two summers ago, Gary Rubenstein wrote his annual article
critiquing the methods and goals of the TFA Institute that was
currently in session. As Gary indicates, he has been
called a “bully” for doing this in the past, with TFA
officials discouraging CM’s from posting or even
reading Gary’s blog:
http://garyrubinstein.teachforus.org/2013/06/22/those-teachers-are-failures/
The conversation includes a story of how TFA students—
most of them from privileged backgrounds—drive around
the poor neighborhoods like those seen on “THE WIRE”,
and observe the people the same way that tourists on the
Disneyland Jungle Cruise would observe the animatronic
animals and robot natives on display.
One thing that Gary found offensive was that the TFA
instructor on this “jungle cruise” commented
while observing the poor kids:
“Everyone you see was once someone’s student.’…
And those teachers (who once taught them) are failures.”
Wow! This set people off, as evidenced by the
COMMENTS section, which I’m excerpting here.
Maggie Peterson said that the TFA teacher who
said this “espouses what is, in my opinion,
a common TFA trope, that a real, caring, belief that your
students CAN do better makes them actually DO better.
———————————
MAGGIE PETERSON:
“Even in TFA policy actions, standards are touted not as
a goal for student achievement, but as some magic tool
for attaining high student achievement. The idea that
students will achieve, or move out of the cycle of poverty
solely because of caring teachers and teachers who hold
students to high standards is also a belief that there is
little else to be learned about the doing of teaching.”
——————————–
Carol Corbett Burris blasts away
———————————
CAROL CORBETT BURRIS:
“I am appalled to learn that TFA would
roll through any community pointing
out human beings as though they were tour guides
pointing out sites. It is an insult to the community,
perpetuates ‘us and them’ thinking, and reveals a
practice more suited for a cult than a teacher
preparation program.”
“When my husband was a teacher in Brooklyn,
on a few occasions he had students who
came to class less than 20% of the time and who did
no schoolwork, say to him ‘You failed me, Mister.’
I guess they heard the conversation on the TFA tour.”
———————————
Karyn chimed in, adding that her “drive-arounds”
included a photographic “scavenger hunt”:
———————————
KARYN:
“Coming from a non-TFA background, and
having certification, as well as being significantly
older than other teachers at my school, I found
myself quietly contemplating (TFA’s) many strange and
silly practices which were considered professional
development.”
“We too, drove around the impoverished area of our
school and had a scavenger hunt to identify various
things and take pictures. I found this odd and
insulting to the ‘native’ inhabitants of the area,
who looked strangely on groups of more affluent
white people stopping to take photos and jumping
back in there cars.”
———————————
Mike Fiorello vents thusly,
———————————
MIKE FIORELLO:
“What TFA should be saying during
those drive-arounds – where, presumably, the
windows are rolled-up and the doors locked tight while
they observe neighborhood residents as if they were
specimens – is that ‘everyone you see is an elected
official’s constituent, a citizen and human being, and
has been failed. And those officials and the people
who bankroll them are failures.’
“But TFA can’t say that, because to do so would
call into question its agenda and funding. So
instead, we get misdirection and scapegoating of
teachers, followed by attempts to remove the
statement when they were called on it.”
“This is an organization whose arrogance,
condescension, class antagonism and dishonesty
are in its DNA.”
——————————–
However, all of this pales in comparison the post
from a TFA teacher-in-training by the name of
“Lida Mery”, and her description of the TFA
Institute and her reasons for quitting today
typing away as she stares at her packed suitcase.
One week shy of completion of the five-week
institute, she today left the program in disgust, and
posted her story (it’s the 14th comment down
on the comments list):
http://garyrubinstein.teachforus.org/2013/06/22/those-teachers-are-failures/
Here’s the text:
(NOTE: the first sentence is a little confusing, as one
might think that Lida is “teaching”—
i.e. one of the teachers—at the TFA institute;
on the contrary Lida is indicating that he is a
student/trainee where part of the training is
includes “teaching” a summer school class of
actual students)
– – – – – – – – –
LIDA MERY:
“Mr. Rubinstein,
“I am currently a 2013 CM teaching summer
school at institute. I wanted to express how
much I appreciate your blog since you bring
critical insight into the workings of TFA that
are troublesome and/or need improvement.
“I am a non-traditional student (albeit only a few
years older than most CM’s). For a long time, I
had thought that teaching was that one elusive
career for me and I applied to TFA so I can make
that a reality. I did not apply under a pretense
like most CM’s who just want to embellish their
resume. I actually wanted to teach and make
a difference.
“In my hometown in FL, many teachers are being
laid off. This is where TFA comes in…many
teachers are being laid off, yet Miami Dade county
is hiring inexperienced college grads through their
TFA contract. It is wrong, I admit, but I went ahead
and subscribed to the unfair and unethical system.
“I was accepted into TFA and quit my job (my
permanent, full-benefits job that I was good at)
so as to attend induction and institute. In the
meantime, I spent hundreds and hundreds of dollars
on certification exam materials, review, supplies for
institute, professional dress, etc….over $1500.
“It seemed to me induction was a major time-waster.
Days ran from 8 AM to 8 PM and ALL discussions
dealt with race and class diversity. You had a bunch
of 22 year-old white, mid- to upper-class college grads
who were compelled to contemplate on their privileged
upbringing. I desperately wanted to start my teacher
training, but I was told to be patient.
“That is what institute is for after all. I paid my $500
ticket to institute and there I was.
“Yet, instead of actual teacher training, all we had
were grueling, exhausting, boot camp days where
the focus was on making us feel and act like fifth
graders. More race and class discussions followed
during the first week, followed by think pair share
partner discussions, silly games and then more
silly games.
“It was worse than a typical college atmosphere…
for non-traditional students it seemed unbearable.
“Nobody… none of the 22 year-olds EVER questioned
anything. Not because they were afraid of repercussions,
but because TFA is a cult and they were acting like
cult members. If anyone said ‘jump,’ they would promptly
follow. Not a day went by when we did not have big circle
hugs, chants, and motivational bits aimed at brainwashing
us even more than we were.
“Every day TFA used strategic behavioral techniques in
order to advance their brainwashing of CM’s. School
would end at 1 PM, but redundant lessons would run
until 5 PM, and before we could go back to the dorms,
the school director would extend our schedule by 20
minutes, during which time we would sit by the door
while little ‘Hot Wheels’ cars would be given to
‘outstanding’ CM’s.
“Then 10 more minutes of shout-outs aimed at
motivating us to get through institute.
“The sheer exhaustion was not really necessary. The
endless, redundant sessions on race and class did
not make us better teachers… I wanted to be lectured
on teaching, I wanted actual experience in teaching, rather
than little intimidating signs held up by our faculty advisor
or corps member advisor on how to ‘behavior narrate.’
“Yet all that was provided was game after game after
silly game.
“Our day would begin in our advisor’s room where we
would play little games, silly writes, draw pictures… etc. …
honestly I wanted to learn how to teach, I wanted to
prepare for my upcoming lesson, yet there I was having
to draw a silly picture so that TFA could teach us how
important it was for us to make teaching fun.
“They wanted us to start off the day for our students with
the same irrelevant fun stuff. Whereas I wanted to start
off the day by asking a critical question or journal entry
about the last lesson’s theme, I was strongly advised to
have fun kinesthetic activities for my students…that had
nothing to do with the concepts we were learning.
“But, yet again, no one questioned ANYTHING, not the
time-wasters, the schedule, the fact that we only had
4 hours of sleep max on many days even though we
were not really learning how to teach properly. I can
see why the brainwashing was effective.
“In essence, TFA stripped CM’s of choice, time, and
decision-making processes during institute so CM’s
became engrossed in the cult….the main line of
thinking was: ‘Well, if I can get through this, I can get
through my sole two years as a teacher.’
“TFA loves to talk about differentiated instruction,
they love to suggest kinesthetic and visual activities
for our students, yet when it comes to them practicing
differentiated instruction, they are lacking. The two
non-traditional members in my school group were
the only ones feeling hopelessly misunderstood during
sessions. We would question things, we would roll our
eyes at big circle hugs and chants and we would resent
the fifth race and class discussion at 4 PM in the
afternoon or the miniature car shout out at the end
of the day that would prolong our day by a considerable
amount.
“The typical CM’s thought we were crazy. Why would
we question things? Why would we not participate in
the 30 minute teacher stare contest at 5 PM on a
Friday (even though we had more important things
to do like grading, reading and planning)?
“Most of our corps member advisors were clones.
They were racially diverse but nevertheless they were
clones in their demeanor, personality, approach,
philosophy. We were supposed to be clones of each
other. About 90% of my fellow CM’s, though there
was some racial diversity, were in fact individuals
with privileged backgrounds.
“I only met a handful of education majors that wanted
to stay in teaching for the long run. Most saw TFA
as an adventure.
“Their first job out of college and an exciting one at
that! I am quitting TFA and the reason is not because
I am exhausted, not because I do not think I can be a
good teacher. My summer school students respect me
and actually listen to me (which can be a hard feat in a
Title I school). My lessons are engaging and focused.
“The reason why I am quitting TFA is because I cannot
and will not be part of a cult. I feel like I am treated
as a fifth grader and no importance is given to my
individuality, my suggestions, or needs. Even though
I executed my lessons much better than my fellow CM’s,
“I am quitting because TFA has made teaching horrible
in my eyes. They have denigrated the one profession
that I thought would be my long-lasting career.
“Even though I know I can be a good teacher, TFA has
left a sour taste in my mouth through its propaganda
and cult-like atmosphere. TFA has ruined teaching for
me. I don’t know how to get ‘it’ back. I am
disillusioned.
“While I used to love to give presentations at my prior
job, I have now come to loathe even speaking in front
of a group because TFA has made everything so
mechanical and lackluster. I no longer have any
passion for teaching. I do not enjoy it any longer.
“I feel that TFA, through its brainwashing methods, has
stripped me of my passion for teaching and my dreams.”
“I am certain that this would not have happened had I
gone through a serious, traditional teaching program.
“As I am writing this, I am looking at my one
suitcase neatly arranged and sitting my dorm
room floor. Early in the morning, I will be flying
back home. Yet, because of all the stigma
associated with quitting, I barely had any guts
to tell anyone, not even my closest friends here.
“Ethically, I also cannot bear to know that
traditionally-trained, veteran teachers are out of
jobs in my hometown and people like myself
(with no training or experience in education)
are next in line for their jobs.
“I have lost over $2,000 so far….I spent so much
on supplies, printer as I arrived at institute, I lost
my job, my dreams and my passion.
“All in 4 weeks of TFA-ness.
“Lida Mery”
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I urge all those for a “better education for all” to read this thread in its entirety and to click on the links to Gary Rubinstein’s blog.
Unfortunately, it is becoming all to easy to say about more and more TFAs—
Question: What part of “cult” do they not understand?
Answer: the C and the U and the L and the T. And what it spells…
¿? Yes, I know, I am not demonstrating the ‘right corps member mindset.’ [see my above comment]
And proud of it.
😎
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The next logical step is to distribute the TFA ‘chats’ to colleges, universities and school districts. TFA must be hung out to dry and rejected and denied access to public schools. TFA must have its source of fodder closed off. Is there any other viable option in this struggle? Failure to act decisively will allow TFA to continue its recruitment and public school placements.
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What happens to a TFA Corps Member who questions the party line?
Read this:
http://www.progressive.org/news/2013/09/184340/why-teach-america-kicked-me-out
– – – – – – – – – – – – –
JAY SAPER:
“It was not until I asked why Teach for America was strikingly absent from the countless community demonstrations for schools I attend each week.
“Concerns only materialized when I asked why my body was being used to dismantle the Philadelphia public schools.
“Concerns only materialized when I asked to talk about fostering critical thinking, supporting students’ identities, and approaching the classroom with love, instead of merely discussing how to control bodies.
“Concerns only materialized when I refused to strictly follow the command ‘obedience leads to freedom.’ A phrase I will never bow down to for millions of my ancestors were brutally massacred in genocide waged under its translation: Arbeit macht frei.
“Concerns only materialized when they realized I refused to displace veteran teachers, disrupt community, and instill permanent instability, a feat they arduously worked to achieve by placing the rest of the Philly corps of over 100 in teaching positions despite layoffs of 1 in 5 veteran educators.
———————————————-
Just before being fired, he’s told by his non-educator
supervisor:
“Jay, your opinions need to remain silent.”
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Thanks Jack! Great link!
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TFA partners with universities, or tries to partner with universities, as does TNTP, to grant masters degrees on its cult member scabs. Meanwhile, back in reality land, masters degrees are being taken out of the pay scale, and after those who are grandfathered in, the teachers that come behind that cut off date do not receive more in salary for a masters degree. I would imagine this has something to do with TFA and TNTP efforts to undercut real teachers, while conferring gift masters degrees on their own through Relay.
It has always amazed me how Broad Supes get appointments…when they haven’t gone up through the ranks, and don’t have the appropriate training, experience, education or credentials. Why do these clowns not get run out of town (sooner than later)?
Also, municipalities are taking off the table any tuition assistance towards masters or any other advanced degrees, unless you were grandfathered in. This, of course, makes the whole package cheaper as teachers are required to pay into their health benefits, etc. Meanwhile, TFA and TNTP are conferring bogus masters degrees on their members, and I’m guessing this is a free perk too.
I hate everything about TFA and TNTP and all the fake non-profits and all the lies they spew. I hope the tables turn and the truths come out and we can get these thieves out of education once and for all.
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Our hope for the future is in the integrity of those who left the TFA program, not because they couldn’t do the job, but in protest of the very essence of the program.
I wish them a full and enriching life in a career which matches their vision.
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TFA should be run off every campus. It is the tail that wags the dog, and its charters and its stance and its lobbying and its “leaders” have done nothing but harm education, and line its own pockets.
TFA should go away quietly. Now, to be completely childish because I’m having a bad week….ever notice how Wendy Kopp looks like an alien?
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Donna – great idea! When I was at a state public university several years ago, I saw a TFA poster on a board in a classroom hallway. Back then I wasn’t as bold as I have become now (thanks to Diane and BATs), and I left it on the board.
Good idea for teachers and other BATS – take down TFA posters at local colleges and universities and replace them with appropriate pro-public education posters.
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a great first step. educators and should fight back. this is a pernicious organization that should ousted from the public school.
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