Quote:
Originally Posted by snowy
I didn't mean to imply that all public school teachers are lazy. I spend a lot of time around the public schools and have had an opportunity to observe a lot of different kinds of teachers. Sure, there are lots of teachers who work very hard, but there are also those who don't, just like in any field. NCLB enables already lazy teachers to be even lazier, because they don't have to think critically about their pedagogy, their lesson plans, or even the curriculum, because it all goes towards the test anyways, right?. It is now handed to them in one federally-mandated package (with obvious tweaks at both the state and local level), and they only have to work towards the goal of satisfactory test scores, not actual learning. I met one teacher last fall who made me sick to my stomach--she refused to teach her 6th grade social studies class because the teacher's edition of the required text had not arrived yet, and it was six weeks into the school year. She said she absolutely had to have that text, or else she wouldn't know what to teach. So they had study hall instead.
Good teachers always think critically about the methods they use and self-reflect on how to become a better teacher. That was one of the most important lessons I've learned over the course of my observations, from a veteran teacher who works his ass off everyday for the sake of his students, trying to figure out new ways to reach them. He's been in the classroom for thirty years, but he's still thinking about what he does and how he does it. For most good teachers, NCLB is irrelevant and a waste of time. They don't think about it until the kids get taken out of the classroom for a week of testing.
And I don't know where teachers only get 15-minute lunch breaks. Around here, teachers get 30-45 minutes.
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Sorry
snowy, that actually wasn't directed at you. Down here in SC, we're in the middle of a lot of contention about school choice, vouchers, and the failure of our public education system. My mom taught public school for 27 years, and I know firsthand how tough the job is. One of the common complaints I hear from people in favor of systems like NCLB, school vouchers, etc is the notion that public school teachers, in general, have a sweet set up and don't really work that hard. This is from people how graze around cubicles 3 hours out of the day, play golf for business purposes, and push paper. Therefore, I tend to conflate the two criticisms; people in support of NCLB seem to think that by moving the public school system to a quasi-capitalist competitive structure, they will weed out the lazy teachers who have this sweet setup, when most teachers only want to do their job well. I agree with you - there are some real pieces of shit in the public teaching profession who give it a bad image, much like any other field.
So I wasn't responding to your post really - just giving an opinion on the NCLB issue.