Jennifer Berkshire, expert education journalist and co-author of A Wolf at the Schoolhouse Door, writes in The Nation about the forces driving teachers out of the schools.
She interviewed many teachers who explained why they were leaving. Some cited ”the bad teacher” narrative promulgated by Arne Duncan and his insistence that teachers be evaluated, based on their students’ test scores, which is both ineffective and inaccurate. His and Obama’s “Race to the Top” was deeply demoralizing to teachers, and it accomplished nothing positive.
She begins:
Neal Patel survived teaching in the pandemic. It was the culture wars that did him in.
In the fall of 2020, Patel added two flags to the wall of his science classroom in Johnston, Iowa. Now, alongside images of energy waves and the electromagnetic spectrum were the Gay Pride rainbow flag and a proclamation that Black Lives Matter. The flags, says Patel, represented the kind of inclusive space he was committed to creating, sending a signal to all students that even in this conservative suburb of Des Moines, there was a place for them.
School administrators supported him—on one condition. “They’re just there as decoration,” Patel says. “The only time I discuss the flags is when a student asks me about them.”
Patel assumes it was a student who snapped a picture of the display. Somehow it ended up on the Facebook page of a conservative state legislator. Representative Steve Holt, who lives 100 miles from Johnston, pointed to the flags as evidence of creeping left-wing indoctrination in Iowa’s schools and encouraged his constituents to take a stand. Patel says he was shocked by the attention, then upset: “Holt thinks it’s a political issue to try to create an inclusive environment, and he’s using that to try to further divide our community.”Johnston has grown only more divided since Patel became Facebook fodder. At a school board meeting last fall, members debated whether to ban two books on race, including one by the Native American writer Sherman Alexie, after parents complained. The president of the Iowa State Senate, who represents a neighboring county, took the mic during the public comment period, calling for teachers who assigned “obscene” material to be prosecuted. Patel was in the crowd that night, to lend support to minority and LGBTQ students who’d come to speak out against banning the books. And he had an announcement of his own to make: This year would be his last as a teacher in Johnston.
The Obama administration made matters much worse for teachers when it imposed test-based evaluation as the heart of its “reforms.”
The thinking went something like this: Make teacher evaluations tougher, and teaching would get better, which would mean higher student achievement, more students graduating from college, and ultimately a country better able to outsmart China et al. “Tougher” meant holding teachers accountable for how their students fared on standardized tests…
In 2010, Colorado became one of the first states to enact a high-stakes teacher evaluation law; by 2017, nearly every state had one on the books. While the pandemic may have disrupted everything about schooling, policies like Colorado’s Senate Bill 10, with its 18-page evaluation rubric and 345-page user guide aimed at weeding out bad teachers, remain in place.
For Shannon Peterson, an English language acquisition teacher in Aurora, that meant leading her students through a writing exercise last fall as her principal observed. Peterson’s students, many of them immigrants who live in poverty, bore the pandemic heavily, she says: “The kids are stressed, all of their writing is about anxiety, and attendance is way down.”
To her delight, the students responded enthusiastically to the writing prompt she’d come up with: comparing and contrasting the Harlem Renaissance and Black Lives Matter, and how the entertainment industries in their respective eras related to both. In a year of stress and struggle for teachers and students alike, here was something to celebrate. “Excellent writing came out of this,” Peterson says.
Her principal wasn’t convinced. Peterson, he felt, hadn’t done enough actual teaching during the observation. “I just don’t feel comfortable checking off these boxes,” he told her.
The previous year, when the cash-strapped school district had offered teachers buyouts to leave, Peterson turned it down: “I felt an enormous obligation to go back for the kids and my colleagues.” After her evaluation, though, Peterson had reached a breaking point. She quit a week later, walking away from a career that spanned 23 years, 18½ of them in Aurora. “I’m not a box,” Peterson says.
Two weeks after Peterson resigned, a major study came out: The decade-long push to weed out bad teachers had come to naught. The billions of dollars spent, the wars with teachers’ unions, and the collapse in teacher morale had produced “null effects” on student test scores and educational attainment.
Please open the link and read the study. Billions of dollars wasted on ineffective and demoralizing teacher evaluations that produced tons of data but nothing else.
The capitalizers are not just driving teachers out of their profession —
they are driving the profession out of teaching.
“The capitalizers are not just driving teachers out of their profession —
they are driving the profession out of teaching.”
Well said, Jon!
It’s not a side-effect, it’s the end-game. They would if they could — and they may just finish what they’ve well begun — reduce teachers to the status of supermarket check-out clerks … and we already see what comes after that …
Duncan was asked if his position on VAM to measure teachers has changed in light of the studies. Through a spokesperson, the answer is “no”- the studies haven’t informed or changed his position at all:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2014/05/18/arne-duncans-reaction-to-new-research-slamming-teacher-evaluation-method-he-favors/
Ed reform is an echo chamber. If a study goes against their preferred policy or narrative they simply ignore it. Conversly, if a study supports their preferred policy or narrative they promote it.
That’s the main problem with student testing in my view- I don’t object to testing students in some reasonable way. I object to the fact that no matter what the test results say we will get the exact same policy from ed reformers. It’s baked in before the experiment even starts.
Test scores go up, charters vouchers and new regulations for public schools. Test scores go down, charters, vouchers and new regulations for public schools. It’s a game public schools can’t win, so public school students shouldn’t be forced to play. It offers no benefit to them.
“Dale Chu
Dale_Chu
“Urban charters boost the achievement of their own students and they have a neutral to positive impact on the achievement of children in traditional public schools.”
They don’t even pretend to work for public schools or public school students. The absolute best ed reform offers is that public schools will receive a “neutral or positive” impact from ed reformers working exclusively on promoting and marketing charters and vouchers.
For this you’re supposed to hire and pay them to run every public school system in the country. For a questionable “trickle down effect” on the public schools they don’t support or work for, and don’t even claim to offer any direct benefit to. They really could not make it more clear that public schools and public school students are the dead-last priority.
Maybe, just maybe, 85% of the students in this country will receive some attentuated “competitive” effect from the preferred charters and vouchers. That’s the offer.
In addition to the usual complaints about salary and benefits, teachers are leaving due to the “toxic political climate” in their schools. Teachers are tired from Covid, the continuous micro-managing, over testing of students,data collection and examination and the loss of any sense of agency over their work. Peter Greene describes what is happening to teachers as “moral injury” that leads to depression and anxiety. In a second post Greene reports on a new study from Harvard. All the data collection does not raise test scores. If we lived in a sane society, evidence would lead to change. Teachers are burning out because they feel helpless. The current toxic climate is wholly political and fed by copious amounts of dark money. Nothing will change unless we can get the special interest groups out of our public schools. By the way somebody should wake up the unions that teachers pay for. They should be actively fighting the poison that is destroying teaching and taking more than just a tangential role in the struggle. https://curmudgucation.blogspot.com/
A question that should be raised is whether only public school teachers are leaving or are teachers in K-12 private schools as likely to leave.
If private school teachers are more likely to stay, it just gives the school choice proponents another argument for their case.
Not if other variables like class size differ, not if students are weeded out, like those without tech savvy parents to navigate Zoom lessons, not if the schools have expensive ventilation systems,…
Not if private school boards have avoided being targeted by gun toting Trump supporters and religious zealots, not if money has insulated the private schools from Gates-funded policy mandates
Treating students like human beings would improve outcomes for all involved in public schools. Per my experience, that is too much to ask. Especially at the elementary level. I can never, in good faith, return to the elementary classroom, where subjecting children to harmful practices is required to earn a paycheck. At least at the high school level, the students now have the vocabulary to express their disapproval.
The problem with education is everyone went through it and everyone had at least one and likely many more bad teachers.
How many lives were knocked off course due to bad teaching? How many students and parents wondered how their bad teacher was still teaching and why nothing could be done about it? How many people have to interact with high school graduates who lack the skills that most people assume a middle schooler should have?
In the long run, eduation falls along an S-curve but everyone wants to assume the S-curve away and believe that every student can learn calculus and Latin.
Parents are overwhelmingly supportive of their public schools and teachers. Bad apples are outliers, not the norm. Every career has a few of the them, and where I worked the the bad apples didn’t make it through tenure.
I did not. My teachers were great. All the way through, and I’ve benefitted greatly from them. It sounds like you need to get involved in your local school system if yours wasn’t very good.
Darrell, I am with you. I had some wonderful teachers. I had some who were so-so, but they didn’t ruin my life. I always believed that my progress in school was up to me, not the teacher. But maybe that was just me.
Anyone who claims to have never had a bad teacher is either lying for political or partisan purposes or could not recognize a bad teacher is they actually had one.
Most people can tell stories about the teacher close to retirement who was dialing it in, who was more interested in sports or a different class, or who had no idea how to teach the subject they were teaching.
Ask ten people you know to describe the worst teacher they had.
I am not lying. I never had a “bad” teacher. I am sorry for you that you did.
Where are all those “great” teachers?
Are they in hiding or did they quit?
They are not in charter schools or voucher schools.
Maybe they are in private schools, the ones where the tuition is $30,000-70,000 per year.
Even if they are, they are paid less than public school teachers and have no union or benefits.
Except the U of Chicago Lab School, a private school with a teachers’ union.
I worked in a district where teachers nearing retirement carried a lot of unpaid committee work because many newbies had to get home to take care of their own children. These were dedicated teachers that cared about the future of the district. They behaved like the professionals they were.
It is hard to believe that anyone who went to public schools in Texas never had a coach or a teacher in 7th through 12th grade who was just going through the motions of teaching history, social studies, or government.
Too many people who became physicians, scientist, or engineers tell stories about having dumb teachers. I remember having a science teacher who had to idea what toxicology was and could not answer simple questions about poisonous substances. Many physicist laugh about what their teachers told them about the sky being blue.
And that does not include all of the people who never made it to careers in STEM because they had such bad math or science teachers that they lost interest in the subject.
Every state has a certain number of uneducated people. Texas is no different. I do know that Texas graduates many fine engineers from the many technical programs available in the state. https://today.tamu.edu/2020/09/10/money-magazine-ranks-texas-am-best-in-texas/
Super:
there was a stranger who came into a new town. On the side of the road he spotted a local and approached him.
“Hey! friend,” he asked, “What kind of people live in this town?”
“Well,” the old man started, “how was folks where you come from?”
“Horrible,” said the stranger, “thieves and fools to a man. You come nearer trusting a bank robber than any of those people.”
“Well,” the old man mused, “That’s about what kind of people you find here.”
Next day another stranger came to the same town town. He spotted the same man and approached him.
“Hey! friend,” he asked, “What kind of people live in this town?”
“Well,” the old man started, “how was folks where you come from?”
“Wonderful,” said the stranger, “Them folks where I come from would give you the shirt off their back.”
“Well,” the old man mused, “That’s about what kind of people you find here.”
Super: A lot of students learn that even the most incompetent instructor has something to offer. People, they learn, are just that way. Some of them will be made for me and some of them will be made for somebody else.
Then there are students that remain hypercritical their entire lives. Go figure.
But having horrible teachers, which almost everyone has at least once, can change the trajectory of interest or careers. Having a bad algebra or geometry teacher can knock a smart student off the track to getting to calculus in high school and then higher level subjects in college.
I guarantee you that I had many “bad” teachers in my K-12 schooling but I didn’t realize it until I got older as I was a compliant student (otherwise one got into trouble). And as I attend 50 year and beyond reunions I find it interesting to hear that so many other students were pointing out the “bad” teachers. Yes, we’ve discussed the good ones, but the “bad” teachers stuck in everyone’s minds.
Oh, I went to Catholic k-12 schools.
I always have a mixed reaction to articles about the destruction of teaching as a profession. I got caught in the idiocy relatively early over a decade ago, but I was a late retunrnee after years of subbing and assistant teaching to accommodate my own children’s schedules/needs. I felt like I was finally going to get to rejoin the profession when I got my first teaching job post child rearing. Then the hoop jumping started. When a data guru engineered my dismissal at 61, I gave up. Ageism has never gone away. A few more years of subbing in increasingly tech dominated classrooms convinced me to not torture myself anymore. A talented friend of mine who lost her job as a librarian earlier than I because she didn’t have the certification yet for high school never quit trying. She worked short term in a charter school that had no business being and took a job in a far flung school district only lasting a few months as a “librarian” where she spent most days subbing for other teachers. She would have stuck it out except for the vindictive control freak supervisor from the central office. So, she is finishing out her last year of long term subbing in areas outside her certification in the district that fired her as a librarian! I keep reminding myself how lucky I am to not be teaching now. No way would I encourage anyone to become a teacher now.
Ever since the Nation at Risk,
Waiting for Superman time,
when the Washingdom cabal of
unelected offals, credentialed
by family histories, elite
schools, and unique career
experiences, decided to “help”,
we’ve been compounding the
interest on incompetence.
Mouthing all the “correct”
platitudes, has yet to
stop the test score $hit
show, or end the complicity
required for it to continue.
Gosh, maybe Confucius got it.
“Don’t do to others, what you
don’t want done to you.”
I cannot in good conscience counsel young people I know to go into the profession now. I have one–ONE!!!!–friend left who loves his teaching job, but he’s in a wealthy private school where the kids don’t take the standardized tests. Well, Ed Deformers, you are accomplishing your mission.
Super: A lot of students learn that even the most incompetent instructor has something to offer. People, they learn, are just that way. Some of them will be made for me and some of them will be made for somebody else.
Then there are students that remain hypercritical their entire lives. Go figure.
From the article: “It isn’t just the pandemic that’s driving them to leave. “The pandemic is exacerbating teachers’ feelings of being silenced,” Dunn says. “They feel like they have no voice in what happens in their classrooms and no say over policy implementation, even in a public health crisis.” YES, the feeling of having no say, no voice, is simply not tenable for teachers who stand in front of kids who look at them and want answers.
This is sad on so many levels, but I was not surprised by the story. An increase of young children are entering school with anger and self-regulation issues… coupled with a focus on data and assessment . . .
Teachers are expected to (and held accountable to) work miracles.
https://www.fox13memphis.com/news/trending/florida-teacher-attacked-by-5-year-old-student-elementary-school-police-say/YNZKCOC3Y5FKVIYZ2BRFLZ4BEI/