Jan Resseger understands that legislators don’t know what teachers do all day. This ignorance enables them to echo outlandish insults about teachers and to write laws to solve non-existent problems. Legislators need to spend time in their local public schools to inform themselves and dispel the myths.
She writes:
Political attacks on teachers seem to be everywhere. Fanatical critics charge that teachers destroy white children’s self esteem by honestly acknowledging racism, and worse, they accuse teachers of “grooming” children. Public schoolteachers are the collateral damage in a widespread political campaign to discredit public schooling and promote privatization. As the new year begins, I have been grateful to prominent news commentators for calling out the scapegoating of schoolteachers.
The Cleveland Plain Dealer’s retired editorial page director, Brent Larkin devoted a weekly column to exploring what’s been happening in Ohio politics: “A large number of odious types in elected life are so obsessed with demonizing public schoolteachers that it interferes with these legislators’ ability to deal with real problems.” Larkin quotes Scott DiMauro, president of the Ohio Education Association: “When you have people deliberately fostering distrust, it has a devastating impact on educator morale… There are just so many challenges in terms of inequity of resources, discipline, poverty and culture-war attacks that have been very deliberately orchestrated by people on the right.'” Larkin concludes: “Great teachers are to be treasured. The way they’re treated speaks volumes about where we’re headed.”
The Washington Post’s culture critic, Robin Givhan wonders: “Who will remain when educators tire of picking their way through a political obstacle course of ginned-up outrage over bathrooms and manufactured controversies about racial justice?… Who will educate children when teachers finally become fed up with dodging bullets—or taking bullets—in service to someone else’s child?… It’s no secret that they’re underpaid for all the duties they perform… The United States has lost 370,000 teachers since the start of the pandemic… Critics have been punishing a them from all sides. The country asks public school teachers to carry this nation’s future on their backs, and then we force them to walk through a field of land mines.”
John Merrow, the retired education reporter for the PBS NewsHour recently wrote: “According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, teachers are about three times as likely as other U.S. workers to moonlight… However, if you factor in part-time jobs within the school system, like coaching, teaching evening classes, or even driving a school bus, then an astonishing 59% of teachers are working part-time to supplement what they earn as full time teachers, according to the Economic Policy Institute… Teacher salaries have not kept up with inflation… and according to Education Week, ‘Teachers are also working under a ‘pay penalty,’ an economic concept meaning they earn lower weekly wages and receive lower overall compensation for their work than similar college-educated peers…'”
Data confirm Merrow’s concerns. In last summer’s most recent report from the Economic Policy Institute on the need to raise teachers’ salaries, Sylvia Allegretto reported the serious and growing disparity in the wages for teachers and other comparably educated college graduates: “Inflation-adjusted average weekly wages of teachers have been relatively flat since 1996. The average weekly wages of public school teachers (adjusted only for inflation) increased just $29 from 1996 to 2021, from $1,319 to $1,348 (in 2021 dollars). In contrast, inflation-adjusted weekly wages of other college graduates rose from $1,564 to $2,009 over the same period—a $445 increase.”
Bloomberg adds that one consequence of low pay on top of a barrage of controversy about what and how teachers teach is the growing shortage of teachers: “Overall, the U.S. job market ended 2022 at a near record for growth but one area in particular underscores how some parts of the economy still lag far behind pre-pandemic levels… The slow crawl is largely due to one industry—education—making up more than half of the jobs lost… (T)here has been a mass exodus of educators, leaving school districts with mounting vacancies to fill.”
There is clearly a tragic disconnect between the needs of America’s public schools and the resources legislators across the states are providing. Why? Part of the cause, of course, is the ideologically driven campaign the news commentators have noticed. Far right groups like the Bradley Foundation, EdChoice, Americans for Prosperity and the Goldwater Institute are pursuing a lavishly funded lobbying campaign—with model laws written and distributed by the American Legislative Exchange Council—to encourage legislators to privatize the whole educational enterprise.
Something else, however, has made our legislators increasingly susceptible to the ideology of the lobbyists and school privatizers. For several hours in December, as I watched a televised hearing of the Ohio House Education Committee, I was struck by so many lawmakers who seemed to define the role of teachers as mechanical producers of standardized test scores—and who conceptualize schools as merely an assembly line turning out workers who will help attract business and manufacturing to Ohio. I listened to a conversation filled with standardized test scores—numbers, percentages, and supposed trends measured by numbers. The only time human beings appeared in the discussion of education was when legislators blamed teachers for the numbers. It is not surprising that the same Ohio legislators are trying to transform the Ohio Department of Education into a new Department of Education and the Workforce.
In Ohio and across every state, aggregate standardized test scores dropped during the school closures and remote learning during COVID-19, but as I watched the televised hearing, the legislators seemed furious that teachers had not quickly come up with a different set of test-score production methods and turned the scores around. They seemed to believe that teachers should have been able to erase students’ emotional struggles during the return to schooling after COVID disruptions. Several declared that putting the governor in charge of education would take care of the problem and make teachers accountable.
As I watched the hearing, I realized again something that I already knew: Many of the people who make public education policy at the state level don’t know what teachers do. Few people on that committee seemed to grasp that teaching school is a complex and difficult job.
Watching the members of the Ohio House of Representatives discuss their concerns about our public schools made me think about David Berliner’s description of teaching. Berliner is Regents’ Professor of Education, Emeritus, at Arizona State University. He has also taught at the Universities of Arizona and Massachusetts, at Teachers College and Stanford University. Berliner comments on the human complexity of teaching as he contrasts the work of teachers and doctors:
“A physician usually works with one patient at a time, while a teacher serves 25, 30 or in places like Los Angeles and other large cities, they may be serving 35 or more youngsters simultaneously. Many of these students don’t speak English well. Typically anywhere from 5-15% will show emotional and/or cognitive disabilities. Most are poor, and many reside in single parent families… Many patients seek out their physicians, choosing to be in their office. On the other hand, many students seek to be out-of-class…. I always wonder how physicians would fare if 30 or so kids… showed up for medical treatment all at once, and then left 50 minutes later, healed or not! And suppose this chaotic scene was immediately followed by thirty or more different kids… also in need of personal attention. And they too stayed about 50 minutes…. Imagine waves of these patients hitting a physicians’ office five or six times a day!”
Berliner continues: “(T)eachers have been found to make about .7 decisions per minute during interactive teaching. Another researcher estimated that teachers’ decisions numbered about 1,500 per day. Decision fatigue is among the many reasons teachers are tired after what some critics call a short work day, forgetting or ignoring the enormous amount of time needed for preparation, for grading papers and homework, and for filling out bureaucratic forms and attending school meetings. In fact, it takes about 10 years for teachers to hit their maximum ability….”
Watching our legislators also made me think about the late Mike Rose’s definition of good teaching. Rose taught college students how to teach and he spent a good part of his career visiting classes to observe and document what excellent teachers do. Rose’s very best book, Possible Lives, is the story of his observations of excellent teaching as he spent three years observing public school classrooms across the United States: “Some of the teachers I visited were new, and some had taught for decades. Some organized their classrooms with desks in rows, and others turned their rooms into hives of activity. Some were real performers, and some were serious and proper. For all the variation, however, the classrooms shared certain qualities… The classrooms were safe. They provided physical safety…. but there was also safety from insult and diminishment…. Intimately related to safety is respect…. Talking about safety and respect leads to a consideration of authority…. A teacher’s authority came not just with age or with the role, but from multiple sources—knowing the subject, appreciating students’ backgrounds, and providing a safe and respectful space. And even in traditionally run classrooms, authority was distributed…. These classrooms, then, were places of expectation and responsibility…. Overall the students I talked to, from primary-grade children to graduating seniors, had the sense that their teachers had their best interests at heart and their classrooms were good places to be.”
I wish the people who make the laws which allocate and distribute state funding for public schools, were required to spend one day every year visiting a public school to watch what teachers do. In fact, I wish every state legislator were required to undertake the challenge of teaching in a public elementary, middle or high school for at least half of one school day every year.
Primary/secondary education in America has never been known as good. And as things develop now…it is going to get much worse. What purpose does it serve to dumb down the population?
That’s not true, Vera. There are many excellent public schools. It depends on where you live because funding is tied to local property taxes.
According to who, Vera?
Worse – – legislators are using the teacher shortage – which they blame on covid restrictions and virtual teaching – as a way to float arbitrary incentives that pit teachers against each other, (vs. increase pay or one-time bonus for all who return), merit pay, and other strategies – and as a way to bash unions who fight subjective means of compensating teachers.
In response to legislators proposing bills to minimize or address the problem: Look in the mirror.
This is a decades-old anti-democratic (small D) strategy republicans have honed. Underfund and poorly resource a program and then blame any failures, real or made up, on those working in the trenches. See War on Poverty for most widespread examples.
“Whew!” Reading Berlinger’s description of what teachers do–the number of decisions–really tired me out. I remembered, also, the brief period when I played quarterback in school, and there’s a similarity. People coming at you from all directions. I loved teaching, like I guess Tom Brady loves his work, though he makes a bit more money. Teaching, of course, is a LOT more important than quarterbacking, though one would never know that from the paychecks.
Attacking teachers isn’t anything new. After President Reagan released the misleading and lying “A Nation at Risk Report” in 1983, the insults, lies, and attacks started and never let up. What changes is the lies and attacks as they think up more demented stuff to throw out there to see what sticks.
Why is it that most of the serious problems the Untied States faces internally mostly started with Reagan and the Republican Party?
Great post.
This was enlightening: “if you factor in part-time jobs within the school system, like coaching, teaching evening classes, or even driving a school bus, then an astonishing 59% of teachers are working part-time to supplement what they earn as full time teachers.” Sounds a lot like my sons’ working lives, and they are musicians—one of those artsy professions universally thought of as off the beaten path, requiring lots of hours & not much remuneration, in exchange for doing what you love. Their bread-&-butter is instrument-teaching, supplemented by paid gigs such as band performances, arranging/ transposing, mastering recordings et al. …So, teaching our 85% tradl-pubsch-educated US children is… like being an artist!
The details on the Ohio Ed Committee meeting would be comical if not so sad. As legislators know little about what teachers do—much less about how little correlation there is between annual state-stdzd assessment scores & mastering ed concepts—anything they cook up is bound to flop. And that’s not restricted to Ohio: it’s common.
And it goes without saying, the answer to the headline-captioned question is… because it sells votes. Just another example of conservative Reps drumming up an issue out of thin air, then targeting the most vulnerable as scapegoats “guilty” of “causing” the [non-]”issue.” They turn my stomach. Godwin’s law notwithstanding, their tactics are not a lot different than those of the German “Nationalists” in the early 1930’s.
My conservative acquaintances have been asking me for the last couple years if I indoctrinate my students. They are imbued with right wing propaganda. I say, “Yes I do. I indoctrinate my students into American civic culture and values, such as voting, running for office, knowing U.S. history, knowing and obeying laws, and such.” They reply with, “Oh. Good.” Listen to Faux News or the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and you wind up with faux facts. Listen to teachers, and you wind up being informed.
As I read this I can’t help but think of Star Wars. Yes, Star Wars. As we watch storm trooper after storm trouper die while fighting the good guys it doesn’t have an emotional impact on viewers because they are anonymous and, therefore, of no concern. I am not advocating for the “Dark Side”, but noticing the implications of the metaphor where a republic turns into an evil empire while disposing of people, supposedly on the side of order, to get their ends. Teachers are an anonymous collective that makes them an easy target. At the school level, the good ones are valued, in fact beloved, but at the macro level, where policy, media, and politics are driven, teachers are conveniently identified as and aggregation of failures, thus justifying the dismissal of anyone who carries the moniker of teacher despite their individual success. Our cultural embrace of general data as truth has made this more difficult for those in the school house, including teachers, principals, and counselors. Education critics calously claim we spend twice as much on education as the rest of the world ignoring the fact that most of that money goes to the wealthiest communities. Our NAEP scores remain flat, which must mean teachers are the problem, although our workforce, predominately educated in public schools, is the most productive in an economy that is the richest, most entrepreneurial, and most resilient in the history of humankind. Individual American teachers have profound daily impact on the lives of children, yet because normative test scores identify half below average, they aren’t very good at what they do. Teachers have little recourse in pushing back against those who use the anonymity of the other to promote malfeasance. Yes, we are the storm troopers who must bow to the Empire unable to lead the rebellion because our invisibility means we do not matter.