Category

Education

Have Teachers Outgrown the Union?

By | Education | No Comments

In 1857 America, blacks were slaves and women could not vote. And in 1857, the National Teachers Association was born, with just under 100 members.  Although women were barred from joining until 1866, the Association later emerged as a leader in the women’s rights movement. During the next 50 years, the NTA became the National Educators Association, which championed civil rights, lobbied for child labor laws, and worked to establish national standards for American public education. The teachers union played an important role in ensuring educational freedom for marginalized populations in 19th and 20th century America and basic workers’ rights for teachers.

But that was then.

The demands of the education system in today’s globalized world are critically different than they were in 19th and 20th century America. The teachers unions have failed to adapt to the rapidly shifting needs of 21st century students. The mission of the NEA, as stated on their website, is to “advocate for education professionals and to unite our members and the nation to fulfill the promise of public education to prepare every student to succeed in a diverse and interdependent world.” Unity and conformity are close cousins, and the unions’ recent actions seem to lean towards the latter.

Same standards. Same hours. Same pay. The only problem is that high achievers are not attracted to sameness. They are, by their very definition, achievement seekers. Difference-makers. Shaker-uppers. The United States has established global recognition and economic prowess through innovation and excellence. The opposite of excellence is conformity, and it has no place in America’s classrooms. The unions’ efforts to unite teachers in collective action strips them of their individuality as professionals and robs them of the potential for excellence.

By dictating a teacher’s monetary worth with arbitrary standards like the number of years in the system or educational credits, the union’s collective bargaining imposes inauthentic metrics on teachers’ careers and discourages innovation, experimentation, and achievement. By entitling teachers to career tenure after two or three years, unions delegitimize the value and presence of great teachers.

In 2012, teachers must be granted autonomy over their classrooms and careers. Teachers must be empowered to make decisions about which curricular content, curricular resources, and technology best meet the needs of their students. Teachers deserve the respect to pursue their own professional development. The best teachers must have the opportunity to demand incentives equivalent to the value they add to their schools and students, and the worst teachers should be encouraged to seek new professions.

The union could adapt to the needs of students and teachers in the 21st century and hold true to their vision and mission. A 21st century union could lobby for school funding models that do not disadvantage veteran teachers. The union could advocate for better classroom technology resources. They could conduct or fund serious research related to teacher quality and evaluation. They could support experimentation in teaching through innovation grants. They could ensure that the curriculum of teacher education programs are aligned with the demand’s of modern teaching. They could ensure that the the curriculum of today’s classrooms are aligned with the demands of tomorrow’s workforce.

Teachers, and the education system at large, have outgrown the 19th century union model. American public schools need extraordinary teachers at the helm of classrooms, and there is no room for extraordinary teachers in a union that commands conformity. Excellence must be earned, not bargained for.

The Strike that Failed All of Us

By | Education | No Comments

Why is it that we like to reject the “pull yourself up by your boot straps” philosophy when it is used to mock urban youth but then turn around and use that same philosophy to burn teachers at the stake?  There is a disturbing parallel between the teachers in underperforming public schools and their students: in as much as the bureaucratic maze of a system destines students for failure, it often dooms their teachers to the same fate.

For the past couple of weeks, I have been lazily following the news about the teacher’s union strike in Chicago that was supposed to change things for our kids.  I just couldn’t get excited about it.  Haven’t we heard these things before?  Remember when “Waiting for Superman” came out and we cried about poor children whose lives lay in the hand of a random lottery system?  Remember how we got angry at the lazy teachers who couldn’t be fired and the failing schools that couldn’t be closed? We were ripe from economic despair, ready to be devoured by any message of truth and call for change. We’d grown bored of pointing our finger and blaming our nation’s woes on whatever political party was in office—so we decided to point at teachers.  Plus there was that clever title, “Waiting for Superman” that peaked our interest. We love tragedy, and somehow we knew we would reach the end of the movie still waiting for our super hero, kind of like this strike.

In case you weren’t following the strike too closely either, you should know that it’s over now.  After eight days of watching t.v, going outside, and playing video games, the children have returned to school once more.   And what will be different for them?  One could argue not a damn thing.  The media will lead you to believe that as a result of this strike teachers will be held more accountable, compensated decently, and kids will have a longer school year than they did before.

But I was teaching just last year, guys.  And I have to tell you, these changes are not going to reverse the statistic that only three percent of black males who enter the ninth grade earn a degree from a four year college as cited in Nicholas Kristof’s op-ed “Students Over Unions”.  You know what an extended school day does for kids who attend a crappy school?  Not much. You know what teacher accountability actually becomes in practice?  An extra domain field on an evaluation rubric that nobody sees.   And what about Phil Cantor, teacher at North Grand High School in Chicago?  He told Democracy Now! that his school of 1,000 kids doesn’t even have one social worker.  I wonder if they will hire one now.

Where is the rage about how anticlimactic this strike was?  And why, time and again, do we fail to capitalize when a moment arises that could be the pebble to start a ripple effect towards a better system of schooling for our most vulnerable kids?

It may sound corny, but it’s because we forget that we are all in this together.  Teachers and students do not have opposite interests as the prevailing media coverage of this strike would lead you to believe.  Next time we want to spark “change,” can we begin from this understanding?  Can we stop wasting time pretending that the challenge we put in front of our teachers isn’t enormous?  Can we begin to listen to teachers’ concerns before we fall back on our preconceived understanding that they don’t want to do good work?  Because if we set up the battle field as we always do, where we label children or the district as David and teachers as Goliath, we will end up exactly where we did here—nowhere better.

The Only Way Out Is Up

By | Education | No Comments

“Ever since I was a little girl, I wanted to teach teachers,” said no one, ever.

You may be surprised to know that being a teacher of teachers is a highly coveted position in education circles. After a few years in the classroom, many teachers discover that their passion lies not so much with teaching children, but, as it turns out, other teachers. With all the wisdom of two, three, or five years of professional teaching under their belts, they will earnestly tell you of their newly realized professional ambition: supporting teachers.

As social beings, humans seek order and hierarchy in complex systems. Not unlike other industries, education professionals are organized in a complex and hushed hierarchy of respect, authority, and salary.  But unlike other professions, the people most directly responsible for outcomes are at the bottom of the totem pole, scavenging for resources.

Teaching is a relatively static profession. There is no clear career ladder with universally accepted benchmarks of achievement. There are few, if any, promotions. In law, one might aim to someday be a judge or make partner at a prestigious firm. In business, young associates set their sights on the C-suite.  In medicine, there’s a strict progression from intern to resident to attending. But in teaching, a prolific career could blossom in the same classroom, with the same title, over the course of 30 or 40 years. The salary increments are marginal. The prestige is limited and local. The accolades are private. An enduring teaching career runs counter to almost every indicator of success in our culture. It’s less like a ladder and more like a Ferris wheel.

But Americans, particularly Millenials, are not conditioned for success in stagnation. Raised on titles and trophies, we’re looking for the next rung before we’ve even steadied our footing. In a commencement address at Harvard Business School, Sheryl Sandberg compared the 21st century career path to a jungle gym instead of a ladder. But a jungle gym still contains a variety of heights – encouraging risky jumps and maneuvers to become king or queen of the playground. Rather than allow for some professional gymnastics within the teaching profession, the education industry has outsourced the monkey bars to various “Offices Of.”

It pains me to admit that a certain Miley Cyrus song seems particularly prescient here: it’s the climb, and young educational professionals seem to be always looking for the next mountain to conquer. Suddenly, dozens of new positions with fancy titles exist in schools and districts and Teach for America offices across the country. Instructional Support Teacher, Model Teacher, Lead Teacher, Program Director, Vice President of Leadership Development, Director of School Leadership, Director of School Design, Director of Teaching and Learning, etc. Surely, all of these roles are filled with passionate, well-intentioned, intelligent people working to improve the country’s education system and provide excellent learning experiences for children. But arguably, the easiest way to provide excellent learning experiences for children is to be an excellent teacher of children. Many of these newly invented roles are filled by former teachers, which begs the questions: are these new roles truly necessary for providing excellent education, or have they been created to make adults feel better?

Most of these positions are accompanied by salaries and benefits equal to or better than those of teachers. And instead of managing and catering to the unique needs of up to 150 young people every day, these other education professionals can retreat to comfortable climate controlled offices where they will engage with (mostly) rational adults all day.  What sane person wouldn’t view this as a step up in the world: equal or better pay for an easier job that still serves a higher purpose.  Certainly, these professionals make worthy contributions to education. However, I have to wonder if their contributions are absolutely essential to the education system, or if they are diverting the already scarce human capital and other resources away from the classrooms they aim to serve.

In its simplest form, education involves only a teacher and a student (think Socrates). What would happen if we streamlined all resources for the direct benefit of students and teachers? If instead of having PowerPoints and Curriculum Manuals and managers and managers of managers, every classroom had three certified teachers and one-to-one internet-ready technological devices? In which system would students thrive? In which system would adults thrive in their chosen professions? And might they be one and the same?

Those Who Can’t Teach, Recruit Teachers?

By | Education, Social Media | 3 Comments

“Girl, you’re not just a talent recruiter. I feel like a newly freed slave. I am so happy.“

Did one of our new teachers just call me Mrs. Tubman?

Crystal Coache … steering worn and weary teachers along the path to freedom since 2012.

I liked the sound of it. So did my friends and family. When I told them about my decision to leave the classroom at the end of my third year of teaching, they became interested in my career again. Their eyes glistened with excitement as they asked about my “next move,” and they nodded in approval when I told them I would be a talent recruiter for a region of KIPP, a well-known charter school network. Ironically, they believed that recruiting teachers was a step up from being one.

Their assumptions couldn’t be further from my new reality working within a system that puts teachers (and students) first, or from my reasons for leaving the classroom to take on this new role. I left because I’d spent three years in an abusive relationship with an administration that misused its power; and despite all of the compelling reasons to stay—the stability and my children— I could no longer endure the impact that working in that environment had on the health of everyone involved. I allowed them to take so much from me; I had to leave before I surrendered my optimism too.

Everyday since beginning this new position, my sense of possibility has grown. And though I am seeing creative approaches to curriculum and management, it’s not the expansive programs that have impressed me most.

It’s the small stuff.

Like the quiet. At the end of my first day, I stopped dead in the hallway when I realized I hadn’t heard a single announcement made over a loudspeaker. Apparently, schools can run smoothly without frantic announcements about uniforms, teachers’ dress code infractions, or period blood in the girls’ bathroom.

Like the humility. I’ve never worked for people more hardworking, talented, or smart than the folks I call colleagues now. They’ve got years of quality experience and degrees from schools whose wait lists I couldn’t reach from my tippy-toes. They view innovation as a norm, not a threat. And you can call these people by nicknames— Jo, Linds, Steve, instead of by title: “Provost, Principal, Doctor, Attorney.”

Like the initiative. There’s this saying that I have come to love about “assigning yourself.” Don’t wait to ask, just get it done. Assign yourself. And if you ask for advice, it isn’t counted against you in an evaluation. In fact, if you ask for help, it isn’t only your problem anymore.

My faith in public education has received a jump start—and that is what I hope this blog will do: jump start the faith, passion, commitment, and thought necessary to apply solutions that work.

Doctors for America

By | Education, Social Media | No Comments

“Are you having trouble finding a doctor who will see you? If not, give it another year and a half. A doctor shortage is on its way,” warns John C. Goodman is his Wall Street Journal op-ed. He’s wrong. According to Businessweek, there’s already a shortage of 15,000 doctors, with projections of a 130,000 shortage of doctors by 2025. So why not increase the supply of doctors to meet the demand of the 30 million new patients ushered into the US health care system with the Affordable Care Act? Currently, doctors are trained through a rigorous residency program, lasting three to seven years, costing $145,000 per year per resident. “The residency programs to train new doctors are largely paid for by the federal government, and the number of students accepted into such programs has been capped at the same level for 15 years. Medical schools are holding back on further expansion because the number of applicants for residencies already exceeds the available positions.”

Wait, isn’t this supposed to be an education column?

Internet trolls love to snipe in comment threads about Teach for America, “Imagine if we had Doctors for America – would you want someone performing brain surgery on you after five weeks of training?” Frankly, this is blissfully ignorant First World snark. Partners in Health, founded by the brilliant Paul Farmer, trains community members as public health workers in impoverished settings like Haiti, Rwanda, Peru, and Malawi because they have a severe shortage of doctors. The only reason the United States doesn’t have Doctors for America is because America is not facing a severe shortage of doctors… yet.

Goodman’s op-ed dances around some very important ethical and economic questions, but unfortunately, he abandons them for low hanging fruit like “wait time” at the doctor’s office, which will be probably be the least of the US health care system’s problems in the next decade. Universal healthcare will inevitably create some of the same supply and demand issues that plague the public education system. That’s basic economics. And as doctors increasingly feel overwhelmed and underpaid, they too will burn out and leave the profession for private pastures.

I wonder if the internet trolls will gripe how lazy doctors have become, as public health professionals across the nation try in vain to address the ailments of 30 patients at a time?

As a moral, socially conscious citizen, it is a popular liberal opinion to agree that healthcare and education are basic human rights that should be provided by the government. But as a society, are we willing to make the commitment (and sacrifices) required to actually provide those rights? Or do we just want to feel better about ourselves by nodding our heads and passing laws without footing the bill for the financial capital and human resources required to make those lofty provisions a logistical reality?

The two-tiered healthcare system that Goodman prophecies is essentially the education system we already have – wealthy people evade the system by paying for high-end education through private schools, while poor/middle class people are stuck with a resource depleted public system. Does America have the capacity to provide high-quality social goods and services to everyone? Or is a two-tiered system inevitable? Is a two-tiered system acceptable as long as the lower-tier provision is adequate? These are uncomfortable questions to ask, especially when politically palatable answers are not always economically feasible. Of course, it does not help matters that our nation’s political “leaders” are busy quibbling over the technicalities of rape instead of solving actual political and economic problems.

If you need immediate cardiac care, would you rather take your chances and wait a year for a top notch doc, or go under the knife with a 22-year old-who learned how to wield a scalpel last week (but was, like, so good at Operation)?

And if neither of these options is acceptable for our bodies, why is it the fate for so many of our nation’s young minds?

Not Another Blog About Why I Left Teaching

By | Education | 9 Comments

Every August, I would lose my mind (and half my paycheck) at back to school sales. Did you know there are an infinite number of ways to design a delightful classroom? Catchy themes, notable quotes, color schemes – joy! rapture! highlighters! Where would our imaginations take us this year? We read mythology and hosted our own Greek Olympics; we analyzed poetry and performed original works at our Poetry Slam; we studied Renaissance art and painted modern masterpieces. We read and performed Shakespeare with a resident actor. And all that learning paid off – my Language Arts classes had the highest reading scores in the school. I was rated “Satisfactory.”

I loved teaching. I just hated being a teacher. I resigned in April and felt the wave of relief that accompanies right decisions. But this is not a blog post about why I left. If you want to read one of those, you can go hereherehere, or here.

You already know why I left.  Hardly a day goes by without a cathartic blog or cheeky op-ed from teachers, parents, and politicians waxing poetic about deplorable school conditions, misguided school and district leaders, poorly implemented evaluation policies, and the sheer physical and mental exhaustion of teachers. Several idiots post snide comments about getting out of work at 3pm and having summers off.

We already know why teachers leave, but what would make them stay? “Stay,” because there is not actually a problem attracting teachers to the profession – we just have a problem keeping them for more than five years. Programs like Teach for America have proven that attracting people to the profession is mostly in the marketing. Lots of people like the idea of teaching; precious few can tolerate the realities of the profession.  We are left with a pool of martyrs and masochists, mostly, which does not smack of sustainability.

I have spent the past month in my first professional non-teaching job. Let me tell you about the luxuries of my new job.

I have discovered that there are more than 25 sites on the Internet. Gosh, some of these news articles and videos sure would have been helpful when I was teaching Social Studies. Speaking of which, I now have time to read the news. A lot has happened in the world these past three years, during which I was buried under a mountain of bureaucratic tasks.

I have regained the freedom to pee as I please. I can’t overstate this. Gone are the days of dehydrating myself until 4pm. A bevy of beverages! Water, coffee, tea, juice – as much as I want. (I don’t even have to ask to use the restroom. I may just go.)

I have learned that there are happy hours on days other than Friday! People all over the city enjoy an hour (or three) of happy every day.

My boss does not stand at the door of my cubicle and watch me work. We do have meetings every week, though.

At lunchtime, I eat my lunch. Sometimes we go to Chipotle, which is a real thrill.

I’m not being flip. I’m reclaiming my life, my autonomy, and my personal health and happiness, which somehow got lost in the shuffle as I let teaching consume me. A teacher’s work is never done, because their charge is Herculean. And instead of lauding teachers for the tireless super-heroes and heroines they are, we vilify them. We closely monitor them. We strip them of autonomy and professional choices. We call them lazy, because they’re trying to do the work of 10 people and come up short.

Why do half of teachers leave the profession? Why do half of teachers stay?

This is a blog about solutions and staying power.  Let’s talk sustainable systems and long-term planning, instead of bemoaning band-aid fixes and emergency certifications.  Let’s create schools and classrooms that will allow teachers to enjoy the anticipation of August all year long.