Nora de la Cour is a high school social worker and a former teacher. In this article, which appeared in Jacobin, she provides a trenchant overview of the strains and pressures that drive dedicated teachers away from a profession they love.
She writes:
This school year has been marked by a flood of reports of dire school staffing shortages, including stories about schools shutting down because there are simply not enough adults in the building to keep kids safe. The seemingly ubiquitous theme of educators resigning mid-year has even become its own TikTok genre.
Kristin Colucci, who teaches English in Lawrence Public Schools in Massachusetts, described the situation at her high school to Jacobin: “One teacher quit, another retired, and there have been no teachers assigned to those classes. Students are literally sitting there by themselves. The message being sent: the class and the students are not worthy of this education.”
Edu-conomists who warn against teacher pay increases like to point out that shortages are district-specific and that overall teacher turnover may actually be lower right now than in recent years. That’s not saying much.
Teacher turnover has been on the rise in the United States since the mid-1980s. In the last decade, we’ve seen a growing crisis of teacher vacancies and declining enrollment in teacher preparation programs. Due to racialized problems like high student debt and poor working conditions, people who are not white are less likely to enter the profession and more likely to leave it, meaning students are deprived of the significant benefits of exposure to a diverse teaching workforce.
Shortages of qualified teachers interfere with learning, inflicting outsize harm on special education students and students in high-poverty districts and racially isolated schools. But the hardships that disproportionately impact marginalized groups of students and teachers are indicative of broad underlying ills that make it harder for all kids to experience the learning conditions they deserve.
When educators accumulate years on the job, they acquire invaluable knowledge about how to gain students’ respect and make high-level scholarship possible. Unfortunately, circumstances stemming from chronic disinvestment and a corporate reform model that punishes poverty make it untenable for many teachers to remain in the classroom.
Teaching is a hard job. Planning and executing lessons that will motivate students with divergent interests and skill sets takes a great deal of time, research, and imagination. Then there’s the labor of evaluating and thoughtfully responding to work from up to ninety students across multiple different classes, providing tailored instruction for English learners and special education students, building rapport with shy or angry kids, fairly dividing one’s attention, maintaining order and ensuring safety, collaborating with colleagues and families, and staying abreast of new developments in the subjects one teaches and the field of education generally.
Nevertheless, many teachers are eager to meet these challenges. The very fact that anyone pursues teaching when, with comparable education, they can earn significantly more money in other fields demonstrates that people are willing to give up a great deal because they are drawn to the vocation of nurturing young minds.Every step of the way, teachers are prevented from actually performing their vocation.
The trouble is that, at every step of the way, teachers are prevented from actually performing this vocation. Their “other duties as assigned” include playing nonteaching roles like bus and lunch cop, because districts are unable or unwilling to hire more staff. Teachers are required to attend meetings at which they playicebreaker games and watch clips of cartoon animals so their administrators can get credit for giving professional development. They may have a single forty-minute preparation period in which to plan and grade for four or five different classes (which is laughable). But they frequently find they can’t use that time for planning and grading because paperwork is piled on them, often at the last minute. In addition to myriad clerical and administrative tasks, they must document instructional interventions and, at many schools, submit detailed weekly lesson plans designed to satisfy their bosses’ checklists rather than excite and challenge learners.
The teacher exodus has coincided with the rise of a culture of micromanagement, as government presses administrators to watch teachers, measure their output, collect data about them, and see if they meet goals. District leaders, state leaders, federal leaders send teachers a demoralizing message: we don’t trust you. If no one watches, you might be a shirker. If kids get low test scores, it’s not because they were absent or didn’t do their homework, but because they have bad teachers. You.
All that data collection moves up the chain of command, to be reviewed by someone who never was a teacher.
I became an English teacher because I wanted to help students explore thrilling story-worlds, weave airtight arguments, and unravel sophistical rhetoric. Like an alarming number of my peers, I left the profession after just five years, finding I wasn’t allowed to teach in a way that could inspire my students. Instead of facilitating deep inquiry and lively debate, I was forced to make rushed deposits of scripted curriculum in order to meet standards written by Bill and Melinda Gates–funded reformers.Like an alarming number of my peers, I left the profession because I wasn’t allowed to teach in a way that could inspire my students.
I was willing to work weekends and ten-hour weekdays for shabby pay in the service of my students — but not in the service of my administrator’s need to convince her bosses we’d “covered” RI.11-12.1 through SL.11-12.6. I was told it didn’t matter if my classes only got to experience fiction through decontextualized excerpts; my job was to “teach the standard, not the book.” But I wanted to teach the books: whole, breathing texts can fascinate young people and ignite their genius. State standards grids make them yawn and pull out their phones, or boil over with justified indignation.
The pressure to raise test scores has undermined teaching and learning. It has produced ”play deprivation,” which is not developmentally appropriate and leads to students acting out. Over-testing has driven joy out of the classroom.
President Joe Biden’s Department of Education could address this problem by attempting to follow through on Biden’s campaign commitment to end the use of standardized testing in public schools. Instead, the department has opted for business as usual. Never mind that under corporate education reform and state disinvestment, business as usual has been steadily draining K-12 classrooms of the vibrant, beautiful things that make students and teachers want to wake up in the morning and come to school.
De la Cour insists that the teaching profession could be revived and restored. She summarizes the few but vital steps that are necessary to restore the dignity and prestige of teaching.
Open the link to find out what they are.
I have not given up on Biden and Cardona … yet. The operative word is “YET.”
You’re a more optimistic educator than I am, Yvonne.
Great article, btw.
Time will tell, Ohio Algebra II Teacher. I hope I am not being naive or just have “wishful thinking.”
Biden and Cardona are not in control. Money is.
I am so sick of education being a political football..and all for $$$$$ and to keep unqualified, ridiculous people in control. Sheez.
It is looking increasingly ike Biden never had any intention of following through with his education promises like ending standardized testing.
He has had plenty of time to at least get the ball rolling , but there appears to be no interest on his part.
He just made the promises to get the votes of teachers
I served on numerous hiring committees in my district during my career. These committees included teachers, parents, community members and sometimes high school students. While the Board of Ed. had the final say, the committee had input and our perspective was valued. I can remember in some years getting over six hundred applicants for a single position. We had a wide choice of qualified candidates with the exception of secondary science and math. People wanted to teach, and there was a generous number of applicants for each opening..
Over twenty years of bashing, disrespect, eroding salaries and benefits have left their mark Nobody wants a challenging career where there is little autonomy and maximum micromanaging. The Koch and Gates networks are having their way with this profession, and our current leadership has done little to change this trend.
two key words: MAXIMUM micromanaging. The new capitalism — get hired on the lucrative chain of managers who don’t do the work but tell others how to do the work…
So true.
Cut out micromanagers…. their expertise should be used directly in the classroom. Videotape their teaching to be used to show newbies how it’s done. Seeing teaching in action is more powerful than telling and scoring it. Shifting the managers to the classroom would provide more staffing in order to lower class sizes – and put the managerial positions back into reality.
“[U]p to ninety students”? Most general education teachers in New York City carry a teaching load of up to 150 students.
As Buzz Lightyear likes to say
To infinity — and beyond!
I recommend reading “Up the Down Staircase” about NYC schools from maybe a half century ago. Then read “Adequate Yearly Progress: A Novel” for modern times.
Agreement from California. I read your comment after I wrote mine below.
In my last teaching position, in high school (I retired 3 years ago), I had 7 classes (4 on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays; 3 on Tuesdays and Thursdays–an A/B Block Schedule), each with an average of 28 students. So, 196 students.
And in Utah, our teaching loads are over 200 for most secondary teachers.
Edu-conomists who warn against teacher pay increases like to point out that shortages are district-specific and that overall teacher turnover may actually be lower right now than in recent year”
Specifying an “Edu-conomist” is redundant, since, as everyone knows, the mere fact of being an “economist” makes one an expert on any and every subject to which one applies one’s brilliant, unequaled-by-mere-mortals analytical skills.
Hahahaha! Excellent SomeDAM.
It wasn’t a joke.
The teaching profession could be revived and restored. ”
Maybe, but as the author notes above that
“When educators accumulate years on the job, they acquire invaluable knowledge about how to gain students’ respect and make high-level scholarship possible.”
There’s the rub.
Teachers are not simply interchangeable parts.
Once the knowledge and experience base is gone, it is virtually impossible to reassemble it overnight with brand new teachers. Even if one manages to right the sinking ship, It will take considerable time , effort and money to turn it around and head it out of the iceberg field.
The people responsible for the current teacher exodus have done incalculable damage to the American education system for years to come.
Yep, icebreaker games during “professional development” meetings just to use up time without getting anything done. That’s how it is. Spot on article, describing exactly what I endure, except for one thing. I don’t have 90 students. The last time I had only ninety students was twenty years ago. California had small classes in 3rd and 8th grade at the time, and I taught 8th grade English. Twenty-odd years ago, Arnold the Governator, as part of a nationwide regression, started claiming that the low class sizes didn’t raise test scores so they had to go. The number of students I taught ballooned to over 200. With the teachers strike in 2019, we got it down to 150, but many teachers in Los Angeles have been forced to take on extra classes with segregationist alternative bell schedules, so they still have 180 to 210 students. I’ve risked my career and been attacked by administrators on multiple occasions trying to keep alternative bell schedules out of my school, by the way. That’s another job hazard. If you stand up for equity, you get written up for wearing the wrong color socks for retaliation.
It is sad that teachers that speak their mind must face retaliation in a blue state. No wonder people are leaving in droves. While teachers have always had to deal with inane duties, paper work and even submitting weekly plans, a direct attack from administration was rare.
It is easy for them to retaliate. Billionaires purchase the school board. The school board hires central administrators who threaten and intimidate school site administrators into threatening and intimidating teachers. Teachers who go aid in the attacks are rewarded with special duties like running the icebreaker games at the beginnings of meetings. Students who aid in the attacks are rewarded with pizza and donuts. When it comes time to stand up for justice, no one is willing to give up their special duties and donuts. The entire system is in disrepair because it is filled with people keeping it that way, from top to bottom.
Bill Gates did to education what he did to his marriage, he broke it.
Brilliant analysis of the ills that plague our nation’s education system. So thankful that Diane is providing a platform for this conversation, long making up for her role in being a cheerleader for the roots of some of these problems. Wish she’d go on a nationwide scorched earth tour and sound the alarm of a nation on perilous footing. Few are as uniquely qualified as her on this topic and as able to bring it to the fore of popular discourse. The individual dignity and welfare of each American heavily hinges on our socially-just collective narrative; pride in rigorous scholarship but also protected space for divergent thinking, tinkering, creative flow, and play; and equitable and healthy infrastructures and institutions. A broader discussion of the adverse impacts of vast wealth inequalities on our lives would also be intregal to the talks. Tavis Smiley would be perfect as an interlocutor with Diane. Invite youth from each town hall district to join in on the conversation.
Survey: What do people here consider to be a good profession that pays well, has job security, is treated with respect, and doesn’t make you miserable?
To the teachers here, what profession would you advise young people to pursue?
Anywhere the bean counters have gotten to has it’s issues, but there still seem to be plenty of PROFESSIONAL routes that people are willing to pursue. They all have their problems but the balance has obviously tipped when it comes to teaching such that the intrinsic rewards have been decimated. Teachers are reaching their breaking point in record numbers. Can you name another PROFESSION that can claim the same attrition and shortage of candidates?
Of course my last classes of students were generally NOT looking for professional opportunities. They would be filling the ranks of low wage workers; they would be following their parents into factory jobs or low paying service industry jobs.
Is your question like the career advice Dustin Hoffman faced in The Graduate? PLASTICS.
(Sorry, meant to post a stand-alone comment, accidentally made it reply to your comment.)
Grateful, Brett, to Diane for being a light in this darkness.
Survey: What do people here consider to be a good profession that pays well, has job security, is treated with respect, and doesn’t make you miserable?
To the teachers here, what profession would you advise young people to pursue?
I would recommend they become mendacious, insane, right-wing bloviators. That looks like a lucrative gig right now.
I get the impulse to joke, because I have a difficult time coming up with a serious answer.
So do I. That’s the problem.
LOL, Mark. Indeed, it is.
Clearly all the of the teachers exiting the position have found other jobs.
A young teacher in my school left to work for a national insurance company. She is loving it. Works 9-5…. is paid well, respected, healthy environment and doesn’t take her job home with her.
Where do the young people you know work? Would you recommend that they pursue a career as a classroom teacher? Why or why not.
I would say to that young person this: Teaching and nursing are the two noblest of professions. Blessings upon you, and thank you, for even considering doing this.
But if you are going to do these things, know that
a) there will never be anything even close to enough time to do your job as it needs to be done, and this will be incredibly frustrating;
b) your workload will be herculean, and the work will spill over and utterly consume the rest of your life, but your pay will be minimal;
c) you will spend enormous amounts of time doing busywork with no value whatsoever to your students or that should be done by paid assistants;
d) you will be constantly but completely capriciously “evaluated” to an extent found nowhere else in the world of work;
e) you will be subjected all the time to demeaning, ridiculous “professional development trainings”;
f) you will not be treated as a professional with superior expertise in your field but will be constantly talked down to, demeaned;
g) you will be exhausted and stressed out almost all the time;
h) you will be treated as an underling with no legitimate autonomy or authority over anything you do;
i) your department meetings will consist of the department chair reading out mandates from admin;
j) you will be micromanaged constantly by idiots insistent upon enforcing mandates that are completely antithetical to doing your job well, ones that you cannot possibly obey while maintaining your integrity and values, and you will have to learn how to smile and assent to the nonsense they are saying and then close your door and, to the best of your ability, actually teach DESPITE what the idiots want you to be doing.
As in almost no other job, will have the opportunity, every day, to change lives dramatically for the better, but in order to do this, you will need enormous strength and perseverance and, bizarrely, duplicity–ability to play the game and subvert it from within. You will need to heed the wisdom of Herman Melville and draw upon enormous inner strength:
“But even so, amid the tornadoed Atlantic of my being, do I myself still for ever centrally disport in mute calm; and while ponderous planets of unwaning woe revolve round me, deep down and deep inland there I still bathe me in eternal mildness of joy.”
You will be taking this job during the Deformer Occupation of U.S. Schooling. It will be a lot like being a local official in Vichy France. Are you up to being a part of the Resistance? If so, there is work for you to do. Extraordinarily important work. The future, literally, depends on it.
you will be constantly but completely capriciously “evaluated” to an extent found nowhere else in the world of work;
I take that back. Similar work conditions are found in some sweatshop boiler room call centers
I would also add this: Yours will be the same job that Jesus and the Buddha had. But you will bear the cross every day. Or, to use another analogy, you will be like that nurse in a field hospital with a flood of desperately wounded patients. You will have to make decisions about which you can attend to and how.
I would also add. Despite all the hurdles, frustrations and and chaos, at the end of the day, you can look at yourself in the mirror and know you have done something right and important, even if nobody notices.
Nonteachers have no idea what I am talking about with regard to the constant evaluation. I’ll give you a taste of this. As part of my job, I was required, for each prep (each separate course taught; I had five of them in my last year), to list on the white boards, for each class, the bellwork, essential question, standard(s) to be covered, learner outcome, HOT (higher-order thinking) question, vocabulary for the lesson, exit activity, and homework. I had to arrive each morning at least an hour and a half before classes started just to have time to do my bus line duty and get this stuff written on the boards. So, the AP would come in, take a glance at my white boards, note that I had put the HOT question before the learner outcome, a VIOLATION OF THE REQUIREMENT, say so in front of my students, and write me up–a demerit against the three formal evaluations I would receive per nine-week grading period. A write-up would also ensue if my Word Wall and Data Wall weren’t updated, if the bulletin board outside my class had not been recently updated, if my 3-page lesson plan forms for each class were not printed out and in a binder for inspection, if I were not standing in the hall to monitor during passing periods, if my grades had not been updated in my paper gradebook and the online gradebook, if I had not updated for each day my class website with homework and other information for each class, if absences had not been recorded in both the print and online gradebooks and in separate online and print forms sent to the office and on a list kept by the mailboxes in the teacher mail room (yes, each absence was to be recorded five separate times, and then again on end-of-quarter forms), or if I had committed any other infractions too numerous to count. My classes were continually being interrupted by one administrator or another, checklist in hand, doing a pop-in evaluation. I wasn’t being singled out. It was this way for everyone. And then there was what mattered most–improvement in standardized test scores over the preceding year. As if kids didn’t enter in the same shape they did last year. But hey, I had a prep period on Tuesday and another one on Thursday. Otherwise, I taught straight from first to last bell. then I was expected to meet kids after school for tutoring as needed and to attend IEP and 504 and other meetings and complete the paperwork for these and . . . .
So,…what’s your complaint, Bob?
Automatons do not complain. LOL.
The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
The road to Hell is paved with
goodGates’ intentions.Fixed.
I can sum up the experience in a single word: ridiculous
I think I can come up with a better word than that!
Wow, Bob! That list of duties you had to endure is CRAZY! But I often why unions allow the constant expansion of duties for teachers. And more… why do teachers not set boundaries and say they will not do these things on their own time? I have some ideas. Imagine if you were a secretary and every month another duty was added. That’s what teaching is like. At least every year some new ridiculousness is added. Even during the year new requirements are added but there’s never more time to do it all.
Bob – what you describe as the management style and culture at your school is abuse.
Looking at list of your duties, to someone who hasn’t experienced it may not sink in. Actually having to execute it – while interacting and teaching 200 students – impossible to do well.
A friend of mine trained to become a nurse when she was in her 40’s, as her youngest started all-day school (1st grade). She had a passel of kids & there was much merriment when she became a maternity nurse—loved it, even when as a newbie she had exhausting shift work. It flexed with her when older to part-time work. She may have finally retired [76 yo]. The funny thing was, she had trained to be a Spanish teacher—Master’s & all– before getting side-tracked into raising the huge family. She encouraged her kids to learn Spanish, arranged for several of them to take a year abroad in Spain, hosted exchange students in return. When she started training as a nurse I asked why she didn’t begin teaching instead. Her tart response: “That’s what my father wanted me to do. He’s gone now.”
“Imagine if you were a secretary and every month another duty was added. That’s what teaching is like”
Well, schools eliminated secretaries and made teachers do their jobs loooong ago.
And eliminated school nurses and made teachers do their jobs.
And eliminated school psychologists and made teachers do their jobs.
And eliminated school crossing guards and made teachers do their jobs.
It seems the only job they haven’t yet eliminated and forced teachers to do is the janitors job.
But I’m sure that’s probably next.
nursing
Engineering. This is my husband’s profession. I’ve always had a close look: worked in the same company long ago for a decade [in procurement], & these days get to listen in to daily zoom meetings. When I worked there (after having been a high school French teacher), I enjoyed being involved in the project teamwork required to design and construct tangible, measurable stuff – power plants etc. Pay is good, plenty of respect, especially for experience. The bean-counters have made their inroads, but not nearly to the degree seen in public school teaching. Job security is still there, but different. Engineering groups and whole companies get bought and sold and merged; you jump around. But OTOH if you end up specializing in an area, it’s a small world where you keep running into the same clients and salesmen and engineers over the years, which makes changing or finding new work relatively easy.
An exodus of teachers is exactly what the DEFormers want. The tech industry is already waiting in the wings to step up and provide programs/teachers dubbed AIs to replace humans as teachers and program children to be subservient without critical thinking and problem-solving skills.
The AIs will teach revised history that the autocrats want them to learn, not the real history that actually happened.
The autocrats that want to take over the country and get rid of democratically elected governments are salivating and eager to replace the U.S. Constitution and the courts as the law of the land.
Does anyone doubt that there are not hundreds of very wealthy Donald Trumps out there? The only difference between the traitor and most billionaires (fake ones and real ones) regardless of their political thinking is the fact that most of them stay out of sight of the media by not tweeting/speaking their every thought, word, and lie to the world.
Once programmed AI’s are running brick-and-mortar and virtual classrooms, there will be no need for human teachers.
But the autocrats will eventually have to hire minimum wage paid armed guards (with no benefits) to make sure the children sit at attention every minute they are in a classroom and guards in the halls so the children are not tempted to socialize between classes.
“Hey!” the guard with the cattle prod shouts at the child that doesn’t have puffed-up cheeks and sealed lips as he or she follows the yellow line in the hall to the next class.
“Mission Accomplished!”
Mission Accomplished!
Send in computers
Teachers are vanquished
Bots are our suitors
Contracts were written
For software and hard-
Teachers were bitten
By Gates and his guard
Ninety students would be great. I have over 200 high school students and 7 classes. I get 3.5 hours of planning time a week. That doesn’t even allow me 1 minute per student to assess their work by the time I’ve navigated two online gradebooks that don’t “talk” to each other. My students and I are crowded into a classroom that doesn’t even allow for 2 feet of social distance.
We are failing our children by setting up these types of learning situations. You should have no more than 80 students in H.S. Even that is a lot to work with in a way that you can support individual learner needs.
In most years, I had something around 200 students. Sometimes it was as high as 230. I had a film class with 37 students in it.
Good synopsis.
Outstanding work, this post. The devolution of curricula and pedagogy in English as a result of Bill Gates’s and David Colemans puerile bullet list of “standards” has been profound. It’s sickening. And the deformers have no clue that this has happened. None.
Each year, I have a dark laugh when Billy Gates posts, from on high, his annual missive on his top recommended books of the year–book to savor and reflect upon, given that this bastard has succeeded in just about eliminating reflection on books from the high-school English curriculum via his accountability to standards regime. He is such a clueless (and authoritarian) imbecile.
But then I remember my place. Reflection is for Masters of the Universe like Lord Gates, not for the children of Proles, who must be taught to attend gritfully to their exercises on CC$$.ELA.L.666.7c.
This is the thing that just kills me. Gates, Coleman, and their ilk have no clue, no clue whatsoever, how much damage they have done. They seem to believe their own bs.
Totally oblivious.
Like a couple drunks who have just plowed through a crowd of pedestrians
Like a couple
drunksbillionaires who have just plowed through a crowd of pedestrians.Fixed.
Right. Gates and Allie’s think they are beloved heroes—in their own minds.
Actually the link above (https://fordhaminstitute.org/national/commentary/theres-fiscal-cliff-coming-and-some-districts-appear-hell-bent-making-it-worse) is about school districts not being able to adjust to changes, among other things, to enrollments.
This caused me to look at the former third largest school district in the country: Chicago Public Schools. The drop in enrollment, last year to this, looks like about 10,000 students. This continues a long trend. The head of CPS, Pedro Martinez, stated that in 2003 when he was first in CPS there were just under 440,000 students. This fall, 330,411 students were enrolled in CPS. The school district lost about a quarter of it’s students, around 110,000, in just 19 years. Do you think there was a proportional change in spending?
Enrollment data from https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/breaking/ct-chicago-public-schools-enrollment-20211027-4jupijhtnffghc4syg5sbpw5bi-story.html
When will the NEA, the AFT, and others who support good schools realize that the privateers not only don’t care–some don’t want schools to produce citizens capable of critical thinking. And many politicians–most Republican–are opposed to teacher unions and free, comprehensive education–it can stand in the way of unbridled capitalism and hocus-pocus religion.
When you’re in a fight, the first thing to do is get up off your knees!
When? Don’t hold your breath
This is what complicity looks like.
The unions could end the standards and testing regime by taking it to the streets. Until they do, they are complicit in child abuse.
Nora de la Cour! What a beautiful and perfect name!
When Teachers are Gone
When no one’s there
To teach in schools
The techy ware
And techy tools
Will fill the void
With “personal lies”
With bot and droid
The techy flies
With schlock and yawn
And Common Bore
And endless spawn
Of techno whore
When Teachers are Gone (2)
When teachers are all gone
The bots will teach the children
Shock them when they’re wrong
Like Doctor Stanley Milgram
“Siri-ous School Relationships”
Relationships with Siri
Are Siri-ous and very
Good for learning stuff
In schools, she is enough
The teacher isn’t needed
She really has been beated
By Siri and her kin
The best there’s ever been
“The Mood Meter”
(brought to you by geniuses at Yale)
An app is what we need
To tell us how kids feel
Control their fervor speed
And keep on even keel
To keep them from the harm
That comes from ups and downs
With very loud alarm
And vids of dancing clowns
That shocks them when they stray
From straight and narrow path
(And sends them on their way
To certain psychopath)
“Monitoring Student Brainwaves”
The brainwaves are the key
To tell us what they’re thinking
We need to really see
The neurons that are blinking
To know if brain is rotting
From things they learn in school
And know if they are plotting
For democratic rule
Gates paid for research conducted by the Department of Education under Arne “Dunkin” Duncan into using galvanic skin response bracelets and retinal monitors to continuously monitor students’ gritful attention to their depersonalized online lessons. This sounds like something from a dystopian novel, but Gates and Duncan were quite proud of this work.
Meanwhile, in Utah, the major news organization posted this today. Makes it sound like there’s no problem with teacher turnover in Utah. The comments are mostly appalling, and the data is 5 years old. It’s disgusting and sure to convince the Legislature that everything is “fine” in education and continue funding education at a pittance. HOW can media do this???
https://www.ksl.com/article/50314300/which-western-state-retains-schoolteachers-better-than-any-other-in-the-country
Generational Political Criminals – Biden conned us into voting for him based on promises of a better future for the next generation. All indications point to a desire to limit access to quality educations. He and by appointment, Cardona, should be viewed by students, educators and the general population as political criminals.
These guys are tools of BIG DATA and they owe their positions to the corporate monsters who used it con us. They push the narratives, as instructed, and effectively shut down the forth estate. SHAME
Clarity, I don’t think you can persuade anyone who reads this blog that Trump and DeVos were good for students, teachers, or education.
If there are political criminals, it would be those who wanted to destroy it and boasted about it.
Diane,
Trump, DeVos, Gates, Koch, Waltons, the list goes and and they are all complicit in the destruction of public education. Boasting about doing that means we know what’s coming. Sneaking that destruction in through the back door to serve the same corporate interests and the elite operatives – that’s a whole different kind of animal. The uncertainty makes the fight all the more difficult.
Biden’s inspirational campaign video moved us all…and then…. “not now, can’t do it yet” and that will continue until all that data collected moves to online third party applications – where the books are gone and the scoring is done by the pop up LLC’s funded by GATES and others, including REIT’s and the WORLD BANK as they shift to control the next generation through track and trace, with kids smart phones credited or debited through a social credit score not unlike China’s.
Look at the purchase orders to see what they call “books” are online texts with built in evaluation and testing components. And don’t be fooled by the likes of Pearson, rebranded as Saavas, and all the others that are consuming every detail about how a child thinks and responds and storing it all, ad infinitum, in the cloud .
Clarity, may I assume that you were pleased by Betsy DeVos and her maladministration?
Diane,
Absolutely not! She was horrendous.
There is little above in which I can fault.
However, I do have a concern with some comments on Biden.
I remember extremely well the people who would not vote for Hillary
because they, like me, thought Bernie got a bad deal.
The result was a Trump presidency. Nuff sed.
Obama’s choice for Secretary of education
was hardly fantastic but in other things he
did lead us out of a depression and other things
which helped people and our students.
Please do not let any antipathy towards Biden
because he cannot satisfy everyone on every issue
go in the other direction and allow
democracy itself to become extinct.