John Ewing is a mathematician and president of Math for America, an organization that supports STEM education. In this excellent post, he explains how the past several years of teacher-bashing has been deeply demoralizing to teachers. He writes that teaching must be a respected profession, and the teacher-bashers must recognize the harm they do.
Ewing writes:
“As another school year gets underway, the public receives its annual dose of hand wringing about the state of American education…..
Editorials excoriate public schools; pundits offer glib solutions; politicians excoriate “whining” teachers and their unions, which, we are told, have brought education to this state of affairs.
“This ritual of education bashing has become so commonplace that it’s easy not to notice and move on. But we ought to notice because the annual lamentation is causing great damage.
“Because of it, confidence in public schools has fallen by nearly half over the past four decades, from roughly 60 percent to below 30. Because of it, job satisfaction for teachers has fallen dramatically, from 62 percent to 39 percent in just five years. And because of it, experienced, accomplished teachers are leaving classrooms in droves, while interest in teacher training programs is plummeting.
“Each year, about 13 percent of the nation’s roughly 3.5 million teachers either move to a different school or opt-out of teaching altogether. This means schools are in a perennial scramble to find replacements. Some see recruitment programs such as Teach for America as the answer. But filling classrooms with bright people with little training or support is not much of a solution. A few recruits succeed, growing into talented and passionate long-term educators, but many more struggle and leave after a year or two. Recruitment is important, but until we find ways to retain outstanding teachers we will be pumping water out of a sinking ship instead of plugging the holes.
“Even more concerning, such programs are predicated on the belief that great teaching requires only enthusiasm and determination, not deep knowledge and carefully-honed skills. By perpetuating this view, they demean the profession and ultimately reduce its prestige. These programs may attract plenty of college graduates eager to burnish their resumes, but until teaching is viewed as a respected profession that requires both talent and training, our best and brightest will never consider it a career.
“Study after study shows that experience counts in teaching. While recruitment may be an immediate need, retaining a workforce of outstanding, experienced educators is the ultimate goal.
“So what do we do?
“First, stop casting teachers as the cause of the problem rather than partners in the solution. Stop pretending that one must choose between the interests of teachers and the interests of students. This only serves to demoralize the people on whom our education system depends. Teachers grow weary of having to defend themselves, and they eventually burn-out.
“Second, treat teachers like the professionals they are. Teachers, present and future, want two things–honest respect and sensible autonomy. Neither is automatic or easy in an accountability system that is designed on distrust, but both are possible. Programs like the one I head at Math for America attempt to create an environment in which teachers can thrive as professionals. We don’t fix them–our teachers don’t need fixing– but rather provide them with opportunities to grow, refine their craft, and take control of their own career. Teachers thrive in an environment of respect and autonomy…,
“We need to focus on excellence, not failure. We need to highlight teachers who are accomplished, not obsess about those who are not. We need to avoid driving away several outstanding teachers in order to rid ourselves of one who is mediocre.
“The good news is that retaining our most accomplished teachers–showing them respect, giving them independence, and making their careers not merely acceptable but prestigious–turns out to be the most effective way to recruit new teachers as well. If we want to attract talented people into the classroom, we must start by making the teaching profession more attractive.”

“Where we went wrong (and still go wrong)”
Where we erred was giving
The benefit of the doubt
To folks who make a living
By counting others out
“Reasoning with the Unreasonable”
Reason only works
With reasonable folks
It doesn’t work with jerks
And doesn’t work with jokes
It doesn’t work on those
With evil moneyvations
Unreasonable to suppose
That reason rules relations
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Does anyone really think that the ones driving the destruction of public education have any interest in teachers’ feelings? I have not noticed a lot of talk anywhere with the idea that anyone should get satisfaction from their job. The focus is on efficiency and the bottom line whether you are a teacher, a doctor, or a policeman.How much can we wring out of this person before they are no longer worthy of the job?
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cx: about the idea
Can you tell I was/am feeling a little angry?
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He writes that […] the teacher-bashers must recognize the harm they do…
Mr. Ewing needs to realize that the “teacher-bashers” recognize all too well the harm they do. At some point you have to stop giving the reformsters the benefit of the doubt.
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Microsoft Canada’s version of celebrating dedicated teachers?
Description of teachers who are skeptical about the value of using new technology, “Shift or get off the pot.” It’s a quote attributed to Lia De Cicco Remu, Microsoft Canada’s Director of Partners in Learning, in Entrepreneur, May 19, 2015.
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Interesting Huff Post interview with Edward Snowden today. When asked about advice he would give whistle blowers, it seems like sound advice for teachers, as well:
“What’s your advice for other would-be whistleblowers?
ES: Think it through. Think about the likelihood of impact and the likelihood of discovery. Think about the best and most careful way you can go about it that maximizes public good while mitigating any potential risks no matter how small and unrealistic. Because you will be held to an accountability standard that is extraordinary compared to that of your critics.
And remember you don’t have to be somebody special. No one expects you to be the leader of your field. Whistleblowers are elected by circumstance. More critical than who you are is what you see. Be conscious of what you’re witnessing every day. Think about what you’re party to and what you’re complicit in. Then think about what is right for you, what’s right for your family and what’s right for the world you want to live in.”
We can all stand together and speak up… just regular people, parents, grandparents, supporters of public education.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/edward-snowden-interview_56077d18e4b0768126fddbdb?utm_hp_ref=politics&ir=Politics§ion=politics
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Teachers might consider emailing identifiable teacher bashers with:
“Wanna swap jobs for a week? I’m no good at it. So clearly you’ll be better.”
Might even feet in a tweet.
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