I have gotten to a point where I hate posting statements by teachers who are giving up because of stupid mandates and idiotic “reforms.” I don’t want anyone to quit. I want teachers to stay and fight for themselves, their students, their profession. At the same time, I understand that sometimes people reach a breaking point, and they can’t take it anymore.
The only good thing about these statements is that they tell the world about the damage done by ill-informed, misguided, punitive “reforms.” We can’t afford to drive good teachers away, yet that’s what current metrics are doing.
Here is a statement by Jennifer Higgins. She knows she’s a terrific teacher, but the data say she’s not. I hope she fights back. Don’t let the reformers win. If you quit, they win.
Today, for the first and only time in as long as I can remember, I wasn’t sure I wanted to be a teacher.
Today, for the first and only time in as long as I can remember, I wasn’t sure I wanted to be a teacher. The reason? One that I am embarrassed to admit.
As an elementary educator, there are any number of challenges I face on a daily basis. We’ve ALL been there.
Schedules that seem impossible, students who struggle, curriculum demands, parental communication, interruptions for students leaving early or coming late, social drama “spillover”, not enough time in the day, the list goes on and on…and on. We teachers wear many hats – at times, we are parents, coaches, friends, mentors, social workers, psychologists, and cheerleaders, just to name a few. Yes, our job is to teach our students reading comprehension, problem solving strategies, and research skills, but our job is also to remind them of their manners, to encourage them to talk and to listen to each other, to practice kindness so they may model it, to comfort them when they come into school upset because a parent or grandparent is in the hospital, to reassure them when they are nervous about taking a test, to give them a hug and a Band-Aid when they give themselves a paper cut…because if we don’t do it, who will? So, we do. And most of us – myself included – love every minute of it. And because we love it, we don’t just do it – we do it with enthusiasm, with compassion, and with pride.
I don’t know how you would measure the value of a teacher in a student’s life, but if you could, I would rest assured knowing that anyone whose job it was to evaluate me would notice how I greet each child with a smile every day, how I incorporate Community Building activities into my classroom, and how I work for hours at night and on the weekends planning, giving feedback on assignments, and coming up with creative ways to teach 21 st Century skills to my eager learners. In addition to teaching 4 th grade in a collaborative, special education integrated classroom, I also actively participate in my school and district community as a Student Council co-advisor, volunteer on our Teacher Center policy board, summer school remediation teacher, and member of various committees including curriculum writing and the OLWEUS Bullying Prevention Coordinating Committee. I would be comfortable with having someone observe my classroom management, read through my plan book, take notes on my rapport with children, view my parent communication log, or otherwise evaluate any number of measures, which contribute to being a dedicated and effective professional.
Too bad that New York State has other plans in mind. Instead of fairly measuring the effectiveness of my planning and teaching by utilizing methods deemed appropriate by actual educators, my evaluation is based on a convoluted matrix, developed by some non-transparent “powers that be”. I have read about it, researched it, had many discussions centered around it, taken countless notes at meetings – and still, I can’t tell you how it is calculated. What I can tell you is this (and this is extremely difficult for me as someone who does not enjoy “tooting my own horn”):
I have been told by my colleagues that they love working with me. I have been told by my principal that I am an exemplary educator. I have been told by parents that I have made their children love school and that I was the best teacher they have ever had. I have been told by students that they wish I could follow them to the next grade. I have been thanked by administrators for my involvement and dedication. I have even recently been made aware that there is a Facebook group for moms in my school, in which I have repeatedly received accolades and compliments.
But… I have also now been told by New York State that I am 2 points short of being an “effective” teacher; that, in fact, after 12 years in the classroom, I am only “developing” at my profession.
So what now? Well, when I heard this news, I did what any person wanting to be rational but acting with their heart instead would do – I cried…and cried…and cried. I didn’t sleep. I had trouble focusing on anything else. And then, the more I thought about it, the more I got angry.
I am angry that I spent hours and hours of time last school year using test prep books that made students miserable. I am angry that some of the brightest students I know received grades on the state test that will no doubt make them question their own intelligence. I am angry that if someone doesn’t know me better, they could look at my score of 72/100 and think that I am not a very good educator. I am angry that there are other good teachers in the same position as me. I am angry because, if I am truly failing at what I am supposed to be accomplishing, there is absolutely no way to improve because I have no idea what I did “wrong”. And I am angry because I would never give a score lacking feedback to a student, and yet that is exactly what is being done to me.
Let me be clear: I believe in evaluating teachers, and I am the first one to admit that there is always room for improvement. I self-reflect, I study best practices, and I try – each day, each month, and each year – to be better at my job than I was before. What would a fair system for evaluating teachers look like? I’m not sure, but I know with absolute certainty that it would not look like this !
I received a BA from Dartmouth College in Psychology, and I received my MA in Elementary Education from Columbia Teachers College. Sadly, I have been asked MANY times why I went to “such good schools to become a teacher”. The answer that I want to share, but often don’t, is: Shouldn’t a world-class education, from institutions that encourage you to persevere, to challenge yourself, and to think critically, be exactly what we want teachers to have in order to ensure that the next generation will be prepared to inherit the world and hopefully do a better job with it than we have? The answer that I usually give is to laugh and shrug nervously, because NO answer I can give can overcome the fact that the question is reflective of a much bigger problem. The truth is that most of our society still thinks of teaching as a “fallback” job, one that is not to be respected, and one that is undertaken by people who can’t do anything else. Clearly, this is the way we are thought of by the leaders of our state; otherwise, we would not be subjected to such an antiquated and unjust manner of “evaluation.”
Something needs to change, because if it does not, people like me – who have wanted to be teachers since they were little kids and who pour their heart and soul into their profession – will continue to feel at best dejected and at worst outraged. And eventually, those people will leave the field – either of their own volition or because they have been asked to do so because of their low performances on these evaluations.
Today, the reason that for the first and only time in as long as I can remember I wasn’t sure I wanted to be a teacher, was that New York State told me that I am not good enough to be one.
The best – and the only – recourse I have is to take my frustration and sadness and turn it into a call to action. This cannot go on any longer. I can’t sit back and watch it happen. Change is necessary – and it’s necessary NOW.
Jennifer Higgins
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Jennifer needs to call her lawyer. I have repeatedly said, if I receive less than an effective rating, I will take legal action. I will not sit by and let my professional reputation, that I worked very hard to obtain, be tarnished so corporations and the reformers can destroy my life’s work. I hope all the Jennifers out there think about doing the same.
Maybe if teachers had a working union, this could be a class action suit against being “vamboozled.” Many more excellent, experienced teachers will find themselves in this situation, particularly those that work with poor students or others than “don’t fit the mold.” VAM is not antiquated. It is a relatively new flawed system from economists based on false assumptions that will do harm to many teachers across the country. It is an unreliable metric that governments are using to wield the knife against teachers and schools to undermine public education. It is convenient tool of “reform” designed to negate the due process clause in collective bargaining agreements.
It is interesting that VAM is a issue for teachers, but not other public employees. Is this because rank of teachers are 75% women, and it is easier to badger and berate women? There’s no VAM for police officers or fire fighters. I am positive if corporate America can figure out a way to profit from their jobs, these public servants will find VAM in their future.
Just because she went to Ivy League schools doesn’t make her superior to the vast majority of people who either didn’t go to college or went to public colleges and universities. That kind of garbage just sticks in my craw. The only thing these schools do is limit enrollment just like medical schools, in order to keep the so-called “riff-raff” out. They aren’t any better, and I am sick and tired of reading that nonsense.
Otherwise, her story is par for the course for teachers.
It makes me very uncomfortable that there is almost an acceptance of knee jerk bashing of prestigious schools and anyone who attended one. For whatever reason, this teacher was privileged to go to a fine school with a well deserved reputation for academic excellence and continued her education for a Masters at another fine school. By all accounts she was/is a good teacher; she gives her educational opportunities some of the credit for preparing her well. Dianne went to Wellesley. It is a top notch school and not everybody can get into it nor would everyone want to.
Yes she should take legal action and make the state prove exactly how they arrived at this decision and how they used the test scores to determine this. Meanwhile, I don’t know what she teaches but she should obtain a single subject credential and consider completing a special ed credential and moving out of state. This will help protect her career.
Jennifer,
I, too, am angry for many of the same reasons you are. Let’s face it: our politicians are bought, our school boards and administrators collective hands’ are tied, and our union leadership has been part of the problem, not part of the solution.
The only people who can help us now are the parents. Stay connected to those parents who recognize you are a great teacher who inspires their children. Replace the invalid, computer generated number that the state assigned you with the comments from the mom’s facebook page, and let that be your evaluation. Maybe quietly suggest that parents join the opt out movement.
I remind myself that everything comes in cycles. This attack on public education will run its course when the magic of charters and vouchers don’t create the miracles that are expected. Unfortunately, so many of our students will be cheated out of the education they deserve by the time this is realized.
Hang in there.
You are right. We went through an anti-teacher era in the seventies when we had strikes and teachers in jail. This is worse because it is led by big money. They have co-opted all the powerful forces to trap teachers and schools in their snare. This is ugly, personal and relentless. Some teachers will persist and survive, but we will lose many dedicated professionals due to the hostile environment and low morale.
Lenny isenberg says that to me often, that we teachers have to stay and fight. Leona Stremcha did, and her book “Bravery, Bullies and Blowhards,” tells of this valiant fight.
http://www.amazon.com/dp/0991309936/ref=rdr_ext_tmb
But, when they came for me, at the height of a stellar career, nothing I did mattered because the union was NOT THERE. The grievance procedure did not work. The principals won, even when they were criminal in their harassment.
This is civil rights issues hidden by the media.
http://www.perdaily.com/2011/01/lausd-et-al-a-national-scandal-of-enormous-proportions-by-susan-lee-schwartz-part-1.html
It is the CRUX of the PROCESS to invent school failure by removing the professionals in a lawless workplace that has no place in America.
Teachers forced to go to the courts, as Lenny and Francesco Portelos, and Esquith, and so many others lose years of their life in battles against cadres of attorneys. They lose their life savings. The unions are their legal arm. Without them they are defenseless.
Educated, talented Americans see the writing on the wall, and move on.
For me, the writing on the wall challenged my belief in the rule of law.
But the law is all that stands between us and what is happening in Africa, as thousands of square miles revert to a time long gone in America.
That said, You should read at Oped News (OEN) http://www.opednews.com/index.php
where the readers and writers grasp that the Empire rules… who Diane calls the Billionaires Boys Club —oligharchs whose personal worth surpasses the worst of the rest of the world put together. These elite have formed the cabal that is running the global economy, and it considers the rest of us the serving class, expendable.
One would think that knowing this would make me give up, but life is too sweet, and while I have a breath, I will fight for what is right, and enjoy what our nation offers me, imperfect laws, but good rules, and a good people who yearn for more.
Share your story with parents! It shines a light for the community to see what is happening to good teachers. Next year many more will be developing when 50% of our APPR will be state tests.
A Long Island teacher took her VAM case to court. Don’t remember the outcome.
But many teachers are also leaving because of salary, and in some states not getting their contracts renewed or receiving tenure despite great evals so the district can hire new employees at a lower rate and benefits.
Unfortunately the vehicle that would enable an effective response to the “reform” crowd is in bed with them! That is the NEA AFT/UFT etc.
Teacher solidarity or lack of is the bigger issue.
Worker solidarity has always been a rarity. This is a consumer capitalist culture. From a very early age, we are taught to think of ourselves as individuals. That is, we are distinct from others’ they are our rivals.
And a consumer capitalist society run by people who head companies that may not yet be profitable will have problems. The attempt seems to be to eliminate most of the consumers and then trade amongst themselves. How will this work? I am not an economist but it seems to be a more interesting question than figuring out how to rank teachers.
Unless it is not a consumer economy at all but an economy of trading on ideas only.
I have been teaching for 37 years and although I could easily retire, I won’t. I can’t leave the profession the way it is right now. I am fighting for the children and I am the voice for the younger teachers who are afraid to speak up. I didn’t dedicate my life to this just to walk away. We need to stand strong. ^0^
As a parent I thank you.
She knows she’s a terrific teacher, but the data say she’s not.
Please. Don’t say “the data.” It is not a value-neutral term. When the public hears “the data” it hears facts, objectivity, truth.
Reblogged this on The Warrior and commented:
The nation who doesn’t respect teachers is heading towards dark future.
TAGO!
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Diane, Jennifer Higgins letter is a perfect example of why we need VAMs. On paper, she looks like an excellent candidate with degrees from Dartmouth and Columbia. I’m sure she is intelligent. But for some reason (time management in class, connecting with kids, inspiration, etc.), her kids are not achieving the growth of other similar kids.
Newsflash: your fans will always tell you how great you are. Your detractors will not. Higgins recollection of Facebook accolades means nothing. We obviously need to look at multiple years of data and it isn’t clear what those indicate. However, what Higgins should be provided is an opportunity to view other teachers who have high VAMs at work. See what they are doing in their classrooms and how it may differ from her practices. Have the high-VAM teachers come in and review her work and point out areas in which she might improve. The goal is improvement, not attrition.
But rather than bite the messenger, maybe Ms. Higgins should look in the mirror. She clearly has a lot of potential. Everyone is frustrated when you are told that your efforts are not working as well as they could. Russell Westbrook might be told that despite scoring so many points for the Oklahoma City Thunder, he is not adding value since others have fewer opportunities. That doesn’t mean he can’t be a great player or is not contributing in some way. It just means that we need to evaluate ourselves in the context of data AND observations. Not just observations alone.
Higgins had a chance for a teachable moment. We’ve all been told at some point that a part of our performance is not optimum. Let’s teach Ms. Higgins and her kids to not reject constructive criticism, but to figure out how to improve. And if she needs help understanding what a partial derivative is, you guys know where to find me!
Virginiasgp,
Your faith in standardized testing is astonishing. You have a religious commitment to a flawed measurement. If you used standardized testing to determine your crew members on your submarine, you would have all sunk.
The only advice for poor Jennifer that rings true is to tell her,”Jennifer, this isn’t really about you, it’s just business.”
virginiasgp has proven Einstein wrong. Everything that is counted counts, and everything that counts can be counted. The Scores are GOD.
Hey Virginia….guess what? We are all developing (including YOU) because good and great teachers are always learning.
So developing is a compliment and you can shove your data you know where.
It’s a beautiful day.
Get outside and read a book. Broaden you horizons.
I agree! I will be starting my 25th year in September and frankly, I am insulted with my “highly effective” rating. “Developing” is what I am and will continue to be in the classroom. To cease developing as a teacher will by my cue to exit the profession. We need to take back the word. What’s next, changing the term “Professional Development” to “Professional Highly-Effectiveness”???!!!
I’ve been in education for 27 years and only recently have we started this ridiculous system of labeling or grading teachers. In Indiana we are highly effective, effective, needs improvement or ineffective. I was crushed when I was rated merely effective but I got over it when I realized that all highly effective and effective teachers in my school system would receive the same bonus. I agree with Linda that you shouldn’t let this label get you down. You know you’re an excellent teacher so screw ’em. On the other hand, this labeling can become a problem when it’s tied to monetary rewards or job advancement. If that’s the case then I too recommend you fight back with all you’ve got. Good luck!
VAM has already been discredited. People like you who think that this formula is accurate are ignorant zealots. There is NO WAY for a formula to account for all the variables which affect performance on standardized tests, and the standardized tests themselves have been shown to measure the wrong skills. The whole shell game of high stakes testing and “performance” based evaluations has been PROVEN to be a canard in “school reform.” You have missed SO MANY teachable moments that it is the height of arrogance for you to pretend that you have the qualifications to judge Jennifer Higgins.
“You have missed SO MANY teachable moments that it is the height of arrogance for you to pretend that you have the qualifications to judge Jennifer Higgins.”
Exactly. Her hubris is pretty scary. I don’t think she has any ability to “self-reflect” or expect “accountability” for her lack of critical thinking. So disturbing. I hope she is not in administration.
Virginiasgp is a guy. His name is Brian, but that’s all I know, since his url goes to a blank page.
virginiasgp, fatal VAM flaw #4 (see my previous posts),
#4. VAM cannot tell WHY a teacher scores at a certain level.
A measuring tool that gives no insight into results is not very useful. Back to my Miami thermometer in an earlier post, if a tool is highly accurate, but gives the wrong result, it is precise but invalid. That means with all the flaws of VAM, we are likely measuring effective teachers consistently ineffective (or developing) and ineffective teachers, effective. VAMmers focus on precision (much easier than validity). But more likely, the VAM tool is measuring – nothing. It is really close to random.
Since you likely lack classroom experience, let me help you out. VAM methods in many classrooms are not reflective of reality. In my high risk classes, they appear like something completely out of place and from another world. It is a joke, but we go though the motions. I get my rankings well after the students who produced those rankings are gone. I can’t look at my results and gain any insight into what produced that score or how it was calculated. If a system can’t tell someone how to improve, what good is it? VAM is the alchemy of modern times.
But I am curious. Teachers hear from “experts” all the time. Have you taught K12 or seen VAM in practice?
Having degrees from Ivy League schools doesn’t mean squat, and people here need to stop with that nose-in-the-air nonsense. Guess what? The vast majority of people do not live in the northeast and don’t care what schools you went to.
Or as a Harvard graduate friend of mine said of his teaching degree, it was only good for a district administration as it did not teach him how to teach.
How do you explain the fact (yes, fact), that when you plot teachers’ VAM scores year after year, you basically get a scatter graph? A “highly effective” teacher one year can be “developing” the next year, then “effective” and round and round she goes. If VAM actually meant anything, don’t you think scores from year to year would be consistent? Absent an obvious crisis, how do you think a teacher goes from outstanding to sucky in one year? How does a horrible teacher suddenly become a superstar teacher?
Oh, that’s right, you can’t explain it, so you’ll just ignore the question, like you’re still ignoring the question about which other countries use VAM?
Math people go to great lengths to find truly random number generators. Hey! Maybe we just found one! Seriously, VAM rates good teachers bad and bad teachers good. That means as a tool, it is useless.
“Virginia” brags that he is STEM, but he does not seem to understand that VAM has been discredited. It is NOT able to tell us who is a good teacher and who is not. Teachers CAN be evaluated but obviously it takes more than a two-dollar group test that is not even secure.
Last sentence: not looking.
It is not astonishing that when someone invents his own facts out of whole cloth, e.g., in-class products by Atlanta teachers led to the testing scandal, or persists in saying that the ASA didn’t say what it actually said, or casually applies the word “evil” to those with whom he has disagreements—
That he cannot learn from simple, defensible & provable points made in plain language on this blog.
I cannot do anything to the rheephormsters that they don’t do to themselves.
Rheephormish to English translation: “Said commenter has had many chances in a short period of time for a large number of teachable moments—and that’s not counting all the [to be hoped for] self-correcting moments where readers would expect respect for others and decency and doing one’s homework to be required. We’ve all been told at some point that a part of our performance is not optimum. Let’s suggest to said commenter that he not reject constructive criticism out of hand, but to figure out how to improve even if he already finds himself in a transcendent state regarding his own effortless perfection. And if he needs help understanding what data analysis is, he knows where to find this blog.”
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The RAND Ccorporation study you link to on your Twitter page has long been discredited.
It does seem that VAM is a matter of faith to you, in that despite all proof to the otherwise, you persist in your childlike belief that it works, has validity, has utility, has merit.
Since it is a near-religious faith for you, I should remind you of how the separation of church and state affects public schools. Based upon your demonstration of faith in VAM, you have provided one more reason to remove it from use in the public schools.
It’s religion, not science.
After 35 yrs of teaching and 10 years of retirement, I’m considering becoming a union organizer. I still remember when 60% of Americans were in unions and received pensions. Time to start all over again, and revitalize the labor movement.
Bravo to you, Judy! I hope you can help save the profession.
Really Diane?
You sit in the comfort of your home. You write articles, books and make speeches. You are not subjected to constant criticism and humiliation. You do not deal with education reform on the barricades of inner cities. I applaud every teacher who throws in the towel. I am getting ready to do the same. This is not a war we are winning.
Do it as it was the best move I ever made. Although I still am passionate about education issues I could no longer subject myself to the nonsense that was driving the current path within the profession. It is all BS. My VAM scores were always high and my evaluations were always on point, yet I made a mere $43,000 when I walked out the door after 13 years of teaching. The truth is teaching has been reduced to a dead end job point blank period! Go where you are respected and compensated as such. It won’t be easy transitioning mid career but with dedication and effort it can be done.
Apparently, NJ Teacher, you have absolutely no concept of changes made in education because of Diane Ravitch. Diane tells The Truth, based on her experiences on the front lines and in the legislative arenas. We all have every reason to be cynical. Please do throw in the towel. The rest of us will keep on fighting.
That’s funny. I transitioned into teaching.
Yeah, me too.
Even with all this nonsense it is a far sight better IMO than my private sector employment was over the twenty years I spent there.
YMMV
Come to Newark, New Jersey.
My new boss is Chris Cerf.
Mayor Ras Baraka sold out his supporters in a back room deal with Governor Chris Christie.
AFT President Randi Weingarten forged a “historic” contract with former State Disrtict Superintendent Cami Anderson to the detriment of teachers.
Fifteen Newark teachers were brought up on tenure charges last year under the amended law sponsored by State Senator Democrat Teresa Ruiz. The fourteen cases won are being appealed by the district. One hundred seventy five Newark teachers are being brought up on tenure charges this year. Only 2.5% of New Jersey Teachers were deemed Partially Effective statewide. I am officially Partially Effective. I am exhausted from the stress.
Would those of you wishing to disagree with me like to point out the advantages of importing Katrina to Newark? The goal of the One Newark plan is to place those students judged worthy in charter schools. The remaining students are warehoused in renew schools like the ones where I have taught for the past two years.
NJ, Do not criticize Ms. Ravitch because she asks you to fight. “Fighting” will be different for everyone. But often their are other options. Fighting might mean moving to a more conducive school district or position within your district or moving out of state and teaching. Fighting might mean going against your administrator and challenging your evaluation.
At my old school we had a principal who was targeting good teachers but our union chapter chair was able to get her on technicalities. One time she filed the stull evaluation late thus one threatened teacher got a reprieve. He and I both left the next year for different positions within out district where we can really teach. We found out that since Deasy, the last superintendent left, she has calmed down. But now I have total academic freedom and can help work politically for change. So you have to think about what “fighting” looks like. You always have choices even if you don’t think you do.
Barbara… GREAT POINT!!! And if NJ Teacher retires so that he/she CAN ORGANIZE and FIGHT from retirement or stays in the game and switches to another school, both options will work. Although the latter (along with “fighting”) would at least keep more good teachers working with children! But we all have to do what we can and each of our situations are different.
Sad teacher. Ohio officials found that SLO tests were taking a disproportionate amount of time so it is probable that a majority of those tests and the SLOs will go out the window in response to claims that testing take too much time. The proposed solution for those teachers will “gift” them with a school-wide VAM either reading or math, or some sort of combo. That is called a “distributed score” and it basically means that a bunch of teachers will be rated on students they have NEVER taught. Florida has had a similar scheme. A judge ruled that it was legal, even if it was unfair.
Thanks, Laura! Yes, I’ve heard of that too. How unfair. I am counting the days until my retirement. Isn’t that sad? I’ve never been the type of teacher to count days, and here I am counting days with my family. It is not going to be hard at all for teachers to get “ineffective” that’s for sure. I had wonderful test scores last year, and my principal and I never could figure out how in the world they got their value added average. It is a shame what they have done to teaching. Thanks so much,
NJ Teacher.
You are using this blog to criticize the host– a distinguished scholar of education who is 77, not in A + health, has multiple honorary degrees for speaking truth to power and is providing you and others with an enlarged voice for reporting on what is, in fact, happening in classrooms and schools across this country.
The owner of this blog has a large audience. She is also the target of criticism for her work in exposing the “reign of error” that is happening in our country.
She is not telling you what to do, but she is no less a fighter than many teachers on the front lines.
Your personal attack is unwarranted and in my opinion, misdirected.
NJ Teacher, I interpreted Diane’s comments (and, Diane, please correct me if I’m wrong) to be encouraging teachers to stay and fight, rather than disparaging teachers who choose to quit rather than fight. I think she understands, actually. After all, she did write, “I understand that sometimes people reach a breaking point, and they can’t take it anymore.”
In some locations, staying and fighting can be detrimental to your health…emotional and physical. Not everyone can continue in a position where they are forced each day to do what they know is not in the best interest of the students specifically so they can continue to fight against those actions. Mental and physical exhaustion takes its toll, though, and sometimes you have to follow the advice of W.C. Fields who said, “”If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again. Then quit. There’s no point in being a damn fool about it.”
But quitting teaching doesn’t mean that you have to quit fighting…I left teaching 4 years earlier than I had planned…I was lucky enough to have already qualified for retirement…so I left at age 62, after 35 years, instead of at age 66.
The first thing I did when I retired was to start volunteering in a local school. I can “teach” students who need extra help without having to worry about ‘the test’ and all the baggage that goes along with it. Of course, I work for teachers who understand what I’m doing…and allow me the freedom to help children succeed without ‘teaching to the test.’
I also joined with others in a community organization supporting public education (the Northeast Indiana Friends of Public Education http://neifpe.blogspot.com/p/who-are-we.html).
I understand that not everyone can do what I did…I retired, so I didn’t have to find another job to support my family. I have time for tutoring and grass-roots activism. Someone who has a family to support hasn’t got that luxury. On the other hand, no matter what you do after you quit teaching, you can still continue to fight…by writing to your legislators, letters to the editor, conversations with family and friends…all sorts of things.
If you can’t keep teaching, don’t quit fighting for public education. We need all the voices we can muster. If you can stay, then do the best you can for your students. Everyone’s situation is different…
Thank you, Stu. You are exactly right. Stay and fight if you can; quit only if you can’t tolerate the conditions.
After 35 years of teaching, I retired 3 years prior to a full retirement. I did not take this decision lightly. In the end, I had to save myself from this horrible state of affairs. I had to disengage.
Some teachers feel truly abused by their administration or school district. Would we tell an abused spouse to “stay and fight?”
I believe that we must have compassion and non-judgment for each teacher’s individual choice. There’s more than one definition of “not giving up.” Some may choose to stay in the profession and fight; others may choose to fight from outside the profession. The important factor is to never, never, never give up whether it’s from inside or out.
Since the means available to teachers to improve working conditions for teachers and students are unavailable…..support of the union leaders…..the only effective means remaining is for teachers to leave and hope they aren’t replaced. I remember when NYC went bankrupt, laid off many teachers, and made life miserable for those remaining. Result? When things got better few returned. I received many threatening calls to return or I would never get a teaching job in the future. NYC was forced to negotiate MUCH better deals for teachers to get those who were laid off or quit to return. That lasted until around 2000 when the billionaire-boys-club decided to “improve” public schools.
I left. Found the perfect job in N. J. But then chose to leave to follow my spouse’s new career. There are many great places to work in the U. S. And the thing is they are all so similar. Teachers everywhere trying tofind the best way to get the job done within administrative and court rulings and amidst multiple fads. And this whether union or non-union.
Sometimes people find themselves spending years with someone who abuses them. They too feel that an investment has been made, and committed to hard work. After the first black eye, we tell these women to leave. Abuse is not just physical, it can and often is emotional, verbal, and mental. We tell anyone who is the victim of abuse to get out of the relationship and ‘run!’ I frankly do not see a difference. Just as someone on the Axis 2 Cluster B spectrum will leave the victim the moment the mask is ripped off, is akin to how teachers who are targeted and take a stand are systematically set up and let go, there is no-one who defends them, they become victims of the smear campaign, they are isolated, ridiculed, humiliated…it’s the exact script we see every.single.day in domestic violence circles…I know because I’ve been a victim of BOTH. GET OUT, it’s not worth it. You cannot fix crazy. The union doesn’t care, politicians don’t care, parents don’t care…fight for your peace of mind and serenity…you cannot fix, reason or rationalize crazy…
Thanks Jennifer for your poignant insights. Hang in there for all the right reasons and fight against the wrong ones without letting it break you. I teach in a high school in Florida where not one single teacher will receive a “highly effective” rating for the past year (VAMS are not used in our scores at least through the next year because of the lawsuits and inaccuracy of the testing climate). Word has it that 76 percent received “highly effective” ratings the year before and that was “too many.” Enter a $10,000 bonus incentive for teachers with high SAT scores that just squeaked through the legislation. Add to the mix first year TFA recruits being sent to our Title One school who—unlike veteran teachers—don’t have to also be rated “highly effective” to receive the bonus! I can only imagine the “warm reception” they will receive come August from those of us squeezed out of the bonus because we are only “effective.” Other factors are disheartening as well—the complete liquidation of all textbooks on campus as we move to new online “interactive” corporate materials, lock-step shared lesson plan time that take away our personal planning time, new classrooms that are interconnected with small, narrow glass-windowed rooms for “observations”, manipulative ways to get around the class amendment law, etc. etc.
Yet still, I love to teach. I love to lecture, I love discussions, I love to introduce classic short stories and novels and explore varying perspectives (not one “right” answer!), I love debates . . . all the things that the very fractured “think pair share” Marzano style of education upon which we are “evaluated” (a euphemism for being forced to teach corporate materials) diminishes. Yet still I love to teach. Day by day, year by year, I pick and choose my battles. One of the worst results of the corporate reform movement is the loss of teachers just like YOU and the increase of teachers who have no imagination or vision and “just want to please” whatever powers that be. My advice, Hang in there! We need you! Just find a way to fill your pitcher every day so the system doesn’t embitter you as it so easily can.
Teaching shouldn’t be about “the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune” or tweaked VAM formulae designed to keep the peasants in line.
Lotsa luck for her ever to get a lawyer who will take her case. Tried that route, went nowhere, and I had a very solid case against my school district.
“I received a BA from Dartmouth College in Psychology, and I received my MA in Elementary Education from Columbia Teachers College. Sadly, I have been asked MANY times why I went to “such good schools to become a teacher”. The answer that I want to share, but often don’t, is: Shouldn’t a world-class education, from institutions that encourage you to persevere, to challenge yourself, and to think critically, be exactly what we want teachers to have in order to ensure that the next generation will be prepared to inherit the world and hopefully do a better job with it than we have?”
That’s EXACTLY what her response should be. We need to start making these statements to people to change the perception that teaching is a fallback profession as Ms. Higgins says.
Hi Jennifer, I want you to know that I am right there with you, and I feel your pain. Two years ago Ohio’s Race to the Top started all of this linkage and value added for the “poor tortured souls” who teach these selected tested subjects. You and I are part of that “poor tortured souls” group who the deformers like “to beat up on.”
My testing results last year were wonderful, earning my school district a point for my grade level subject matter. My principal rated me “skilled” on her 50 percent part. When my principal entered all of the data into the computer this spring, my value added was brought down due to a “predictability” formula. This strange formula brought my rating down too. My principal was shocked because she knew I had good test results. She called the state, and they said my testing results were great, but this “predictability” formula lowered my 3 year value average. I guess VAM is even allowed to average in a prediction score, I was so upset. My principal is kind, and she felt badly too. I got no credit for those wonderful test scores. 😩😩😩 This was very hard for me to accept.
No matter what anyone says, it is very hard to know how hard you have worked and this rating is entered into the state’s data bank. It is also very hard for us to accept that all teachers are not being evaluated with the harshness of VAM. For example, my principal said that an SLO teacher is allowed to use the score of that one year’s class. Poor VAM teachers have to take this 3 year average with a bizarre predictability factor. I am not putting SLO teachers down, but I am sharing the extreme stresses of a VAM teacher. It feels like your brain is in a vise grips. It’s bad.
You say that you have taught 11 years. When I was at your point in my career, teaching was still wonderful. I felt good about everything, and teaching was still a very respected profession. I feel badly for young teachers like you. The toxic policies have overtaken our career, and it is hard some days to continue. It’s hard working till midnight on lessons and thinking about that stupid rating.
Since the toxic “Race to the Top” the only way I’ve coped is to stop caring inside about this broken down profession. Don’t get me wrong. I still love my students. I still love to teach creative lessons. I still work till 7 PM in my classroom. I still go in on the weekends. I give out lots and lots of hugs. But, to cope, I had to stop caring about all of this. A younger teacher I teach by said that she would teach until they ask her to leave. I think we are all in that same boat, sadly. We will do what we love till the end.
Hang in there! The deformers want our best and brightest teachers, like you, to leave the classroom. All of the lives’ you touch will benefit from your kindness and expertise. We need you to stay right where you are at. I just wanted you to know that we all feel your pain. It is so hard to be a VAM teacher in 2015. It sounds like to me that you would be the perfect spokeswoman for the cruelty and unfairness of VAM, our scarlet letter. Thank you, Jennifer, for sharing your story. That takes courage!!! 😊😊😊
Sad Teacher: I have included this before, but for your sake and for Jennifer Higgins I include it in this thread.
The first time I saw it, I immediately thought of teachers:
“Not all of us can do great things. But we can do small things with great love.” [Mother Teresa]
😎
Krazy TA, Thank you so much for your kind words. God led me to Diane’s blog when I needed to hear that many teachers are going through the very same stresses as I am. Her blog, along with my past principal husband and two great kids, has helped me cope through the last years of my career. My heart goes out to Jennifer and young teachers like her. Oh, how we all feel their pain. It is so unfair. Thanks again so much! Keep writing! I enjoy your blogs!!!😊😊😊😊
Jennifer, I threw this year’s ratings in the trash without opening. Ignore the VAM nonsense. VAM does not reflect the reality of the classroom nor your teaching abilities. If an organization is going to fire you, they will find a way no matter how good you are, VAM scores or not.
The students could care less about VAM. They want a teacher. I focus on my students. I reflect on my teaching and seek out the advice of veteran teachers. I innovate as best I can and try different approaches. VAM and rankings play no role in my teaching. If you dwell on them like some of my colleagues, VAM will destroy you or you will start gaming the system.
I can’t vote on legislation, rub shoulders and dollars with lobbyists, go on national TV. So, I do my own personal part and just teach.
If the VAM/reform nonsense continues, most teachers will have short careers anyways. The profession will just churn. So, the $#@! with the VAMmers and try to get what little pleasure there is left out of teaching. Easier said than done, I know.
Extremely well said! 😊😊😊
You read my mind, as I approach 60 some things are not worth worrying about! Vam makes the list
I too went through this back when CC and APPR first started and then went to highly effective, then effective and another year of effective. Prior to Common Core, I always had exemplary scores. This entire sham had me feeling devalued and wanting to retire, even though I would have taken a huge loss in my pension. I kept on. I have been fighting the fight being a part of NYSAPE, BATS, Lace to the Top, and NY BATS. I meet or hand write weekly letters to legislatures, senators, Board of Regents members, after I learned truth about this entire sham from Dr. Ravitch in her book Reign of Error and through her presentations. I met great people such as Tim Farley, Beth Dimino, Jeanette Deuterman, Jamy Bryce Hyde, and so many others on social media who made me feel good again about being a teacher, something I have considered a vocation. They taught me that I can continue this fight. I went and spoke out at forums letting others know what has been happening to our youth through the eyes of one in the trenches. I had as many did, Common Core Syndrome.” I know I still do and will continue to fight this nightmare. Jennifer, if you truly want this, there are so many of us fighting together to win this war. With over 208, 000 refusals for ELA testing and 200,000 Math test refusals, we are winning. Next year if this mess continues, I know these numbers will triple. Continue to talk with people in different groups. Together we will be through all this Common Core Crap. Arne Duncan has already moved his family back to Chicago. The tide is turning. We are winning. Join with us and win this for the kids and for we in the trenches. This is history in the making! We will not wait ten years to see results from David Coleman’s ” I don’t give a @&$:” monopoly. Bill Gates and all of the billionaires think their charter and private schools will take over. I say no! Why? Because of strong activists listed above and Dr. Ravitch to help us defeat them. My husband tells me I shouldn’t retire until one year after Common Core is. Gone. I think he is right. Over and over again I say, “Just Let Me Teach!” Another thing is my husband always asks me when I am down is, “Where is the Susan B. Anthony in you?” I laugh and think I could never be as strong as she was…or can I?
ddermady,
I hope Jennifer can muster a support system to get past her despair.
Maybe this post is a start on getting that.
It is easy to ask teachers to “stay and fight,” but not so easy to do so. We are at a point in this country in which teachers are being directed to do things that they know harm children. I watched my third graders frequently cry and vomit due to high stakes standardized testing. I had children urinating on themselves. I watched as testing turned bright eyed, eager-to-learn children into depressed, anxious learners. I had to tell good students that they were not going to fourth grade because they failed “the test” by a point or two. I had to look into their eyes and them that all of their accomplished classwork, all of their good behavior, all of their completed homework, all of the extra credit they did and all of their good report card grades- none of it mattered. And when they begged me to do something to change the law, I had to tell them that I had tried and failed.
I couldn’t help them.
These days, the job takes a toll on the health of many teachers. It took a toll on mine. I was worn out from years of local, state and national battles. I was exhausted from the classroom emotional trauma I lived with 24/7. The decision to retire was a difficult one for me, but I finally left because I could no longer handle jamming a curriculum down the children’s throats that they could not digest and testing them to tears. I chose NOT to participate in the child abuse any longer. I was fortunate that I could retire. Most teachers are not that lucky.
And, I was also sick of being abused. Being a teacher in this country right now is exactly like being in an abusive relationship. You take abuse daily from all directions, but you stay because the kids need you. You get beat up over and over again and yet you stay. For the kids.
It is sick.
Yes it is easy to encourage teachers to fight, but America needs to understand that teachers are human. They have been beaten up. And, they are tired.
They chose the teaching career because they care about kids. And now this country is forcing teachers to harm the kids they love. When is this country going to wake up? When are more community stakeholders and parents going to help with the battle?
Our teachers and children can’t wait much longer.
Annette, Thank you so much for your comments. These comments came from your heart. I’m right there with you. Teaching has become so hard. Because of a health scare which came out okay (Praise my Lord), I am beginning to exercise, walk, and take better care of myself. When the stresses of school come back in August, I’ve promised my family I will continue to take care of myself. Teachers give everything, and they forget about themselves. Thanks again! 😊😊😊😊
Sad Teacher, thanks for your response. I really hope you keep that promise and take care of yourself. No teacher should have to be torn between their career and their health. 😦
I also hope that someday soon we can get things turned around so teachers like you can teach in peace and children can enjoy learning again.
I left the classroom, but I haven’t left the fight. I am still hoping I can make a difference. I am working to make public education better for teachers like you and for the kids. Hang in there! 🙂
Annette Chase: with all my heart, I urge you to do everything possible to regain your physical and emotional health.
Sad Teacher: in all honesty, I am not a believer, but Harriet Tubman was, and underwent grueling trials and tribulations as a conductor on the Underground Railroad.
Was she effective? “I never ran my train off the track, and I never lost a passenger.”
And how many passengers might that have been?
“I freed a thousand slaves. I could have freed a thousand more if only they knew they were slaves.”
So perhaps you might take some small comfort from what she said:
“Lord, I’m going to hold steady on to You and You’ve got to see me through.”
Wisdom to live by, from a true American hero, that you might appreciate better than I can.
My best to you both.
😎
Thank you for your kind words of concern, Krazy TA..
Get the lawyer and fight. We have to or there will only be mindless drones teaching the test left.
The fight in education is very comparable to emotional abuse in domestic violence. We don’t have to suffer unnecessarily as with domestic violence. Unnecessary suffering simply makes us victims others wrong doing. I fought these issues for four years and it was the right thing to do. But I do not want to continue. I wish all decent teachers would refuse to continue in these conditions that around the world are defined as human and civil rights violations. I wish the public classrooms could wake up and find teachers packed their bags in the middle of the night and took trains to a land of civil society. All that would be left in the barren classrooms would be a soft breeze whispering the dignity of teachers should not have been trampled upon.
There are ways (like VAM) of telling whether she’s a poor teacher
SomeDAM Poet: you did the impossible—
You topped yourself!
TARGO!
😎
It is just so perfectly apt…especially at the end when Sure VAMovierre (who led the trial of the witch) asks the (Mac)Arthur fellow “Who are you who are so wise in the ways of science?”
“The Witch Cake”
The VAMmers make
A witch’s cake
To spot a witch
From data rich
The teacher’s blamed
In public shamed
And finally fired
As was desired
Jennifer, your beautiful statement sounded so many of the feelings I have about this extraordinary profession we share. All the evidence you cited leading you to believe that you are a teacher who makes a difference in the lives of your students, their parents, your colleagues, your community, state, nation and world–all that evidence matters infinitely more than the stupidometer these knuckleheads use to spit out that number they seem to think says anything at all worth listening to. But it’s got to hurt, having everything you give to your students and their families year in and year out reduced to a single number. Of course you’re angry. You should be. It’s time to throw these knuckleheads and their stupidometers out of town and start talking sense. You have a right to be angry. I hope you stay that way. You go girl!
Florida VAM formula … from the DOE website. This is a terrible joke.
y_i=μ+∑_(g=1)^M▒〖δ_g x_g 〗+∑_(j=1)^K▒〖β_j x_j+θ_(k)i+ω_(mk)i+ε_i; 〗
VAM is a SCAM and my children will be no part of it.
“Economists are like psychics”
Economists are like psychics,
This cannot be denied.
Cuz if, by chance, they get it right,
It’s greatly AMPLIFIED!!
But mostly, they just get it wrong,
And utter not a word
For them to actually point this out
Would really be unheard.
And when their goof’s so blatant
They really can’t ignore it,
They simply claim they “found a flaw”
And “makeup will restore it”
Love it!
You are so gifted!
Thanks for the encouragement, but the real ‘gift’ (the German word for “poison”, not incidentally) is the gift that keeps on giving ….unfortunately.
This stuff basically writes itself.
All I do is correct the reformers’ grammar.
SomeDAM Poet: how do you keep topping yourself?
So as a small present to the blog wordsmith…
Apparently the rheephormsters do know one little bit of Homer, used when folks like you catch them with their hands in the cookie jar or the loot in their vans or their heads up their… sorry, must follow the Rules of the Road of this blog.
¿? Oh, what bit of Homer made it into CCSS-closet reading informational text? This gem:
“I didn’t lie! I just created fiction with my mouth!”
In rheephormish, explanation = exculpation.
But then, what can you or I or anyone else do when confronted with folks that think that someday, somehow, some way, VAManiacal formulae are going to work—
“Whoever said nothing is impossible obviously hasn’t tried nailing jelly to a tree.” [John Candy]
Keep writing. I’ll keep reading.
😎
Ms. Higgins should sue the state.
Lenny Isenberg is a fighter. You should go to his blog Perdaily, and see his fight in LAUSD. You hear about Esquith, but not a word about Lenny… who is suing thrones who let it happen…THE UNION.
http://citywatchla.com/8box-left/6666-lausd-and-utla-complicity-kills-collective-bargaining-and-civil-rights-for-la-s-teachers
http://www.perdaily.com/2013/11/lausd-gives-me-a-chance-to-be-a-hero-for-student-teachers-and-families.html
Teachers with gumption need to start sending these story letters to their legislators — both State and Federal — and to every member of our Board of Regents. These policy “breakers” need to be flooded with a reality check bec/ I’m not convinced they understand the mass exodus — and the ramifications thereof — currently occurring in the teaching profession.
Everything Jennifer says resonates with me. The powers that be don’t want teachers who–gasp!–care about kids. Nothing about this is child-centered. It’s so frustrating and demoralizing.
In my own case, I can’t even find a job for the upcoming school. Driving for a ride-sharing company or even driving a truck is starting to sound not so bad. My degrees, my certifications, my years of experience are not seen as positives to principals. This is what it’s come to. http://wp.me/p5y5uB-3y
Upcoming school YEAR. Sorry about that.
We all feel your pain. Veteran teachers are even made to feel this way. I have given 30 years of my life to this once fine profession, and I feel like I’m “nothing” as I leave it. The toxic policies have stripped teachers of our self esteem and well being that we once had in the classroom.
In a matter of a short time, I truly believe you will get any classroom you want. However, the deformers now have toxic policies in place where you will have trouble getting raises that we were able to get with experience and advanced degrees. No one likes working 12 hour days with no overtime to be poor.
I wish you the very best, and I wanted you to know that we feel the pain of bright young people like you who truly want to make a difference. Teaching is the last thing the deformers can “cash in on” and make a profit. They have destroyed everything else in our marketplace.
If you’re teaching in a district that has a evaluation system that doesn’t value so many of the important things that teachers do, which seems like most of us at this point, the only way to avoid despair is to find the courage to believe in yourself.
Yes – there’s much work we need to do in helping the public better understand education. But we also desperately need to be there for each other in school, reminding each other that we cannot let allow these measures validity in our own minds. Doing so makes the work harder than it needs to be.
Brilliant! All teachers should read this. Thanks.