Addressing unfair expectations for the next wave of educators
Posted May 15, 2012 at 8:54 am
I regularly encounter, as I travel around the country, teachers who are
dispirited by what they feel is an unrestrained contempt for their
calling and career. These teachers feel that this contempt, initially
expressed by politicians and “experts” with no classroom experience, has
been repeated so frequently that it has spread to the public at large.
They feel they are being blamed for all the inequities in American
society, and are expected to rescue children from impoverished families
and communities with no support from others in society. They feel abused
by demands that they discard curriculum it has taken them years to
develop, curriculum they are convinced has inspired children who had
little prior interest in school, to love learning and inquiry. They do
not believe that requirements that they focus on preparing students for
standardized tests is respectful of the educational process or their own
expertise, because such tests reflect only a tiny part of the knowledge
and skills children need. These teachers are embittered and feeling put
upon by those who claim to represent the interests of poor children but
express this interest by trying to destroy the public education system
that is the only institution attempting to serve these children. The
teachers I meet all consider some colleagues to be inadequate and would
like to see them leave. But the teachers I meet insist that poor
performers are a small minority in their schools, and resent the
now-popular and, they feel, indiscriminate witch hunt to cleanse schools
of incompetents.
Sunday, July 15, 2012
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