Tag Archives: education

Educators as Professionals Ramblings

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I can only speak for myself and don’t purport to be the voice of all educators, but I’m angry at this country for how we in this profession are treated.  The bureaucratic powers that be seem to view us as a disposable commodity, cheap labor easily replenished by younger, cheaper labor.  We are worn to a nub on a daily basis, our skills burned out too quickly from overuse, our experience and expertise discarded without regard for the long-term implications.  Teaching, real hands-on teaching where the educator draws forth students’ inner potentials, is both an art and a science, and those of us dedicated to this profession care deeply about our kids.  We care deeply about passing along knowledge and skills, about instilling work ethic and discipline, and about carrying on the traditions and norms of our society.

But we are treated and paid like semi-skilled labor.

It angers me to think of all the sacrifices I’ve made for this profession, only to be drowning in student loan debt, barely surviving, and scraping up change to buy a meal at the end of the month.  I’m sick of being poor.  I’m sick of sacrificing my weekends to grade.  I’m sick of working 50-60 hour weeks for table scraps.  I’m sick of administrators stripping away our authority, students disrespecting our efforts, parents blaming us for their child’s laziness, and society shaming us for a broken system that we have zero say-so in fixing.  I’m sick of not being able to buy new clothes or fix my teeth or take a real vacation.  I’m sick of politicians giving lip-service to correcting the problems and then passing legislation that piles more of the burden onto our shoulders.

Personally, I think the only reason so many of us have lasted as long as we have is that some part of us has hoped that somehow the system would correct itself.  But it just keeps getting worse.  I’m writing this whole series about the failures of education in part as some desperate plea for someone somewhere to hear what we are saying and take us seriously but also to leave behind some record that we fought against whatever tyrannical, Huxleyan nightmare this is descending on America.  We have fought against it because we are professionals, because we care, because we are patriots, but the nightmare is winning, and it may be too late to turn the tide.  We are losing.  I see it on my colleagues faces as we pass each other in the hall; I hear it in our voices as we say good mornings; I feel it in the air as students gaze into their electronic universe, oblivious to reality.

One day, our country will pay a steep price for has been done to educators.  That day may be sooner rather than later.

Education as Business Ramblings

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Most people who know me know I’m not anti-business.  Capitalism and competition are good when the invisible hand is left alone.  In the real world laboratory, capitalism proved itself superior to communism, and those who believe otherwise are deluding themselves and living in the world of abstract ideals, not in the tangible world of human complexities.  However, that said, education has no place as a for-profit enterprise, and we are crippling the long-term sustainability of our economy by viewing it through those prisms of fiscal efficiency.

I’ve often heard my successful, usually conservative, friends say that their children don’t attend public schools, so why should their tax dollars be used to support it?  On the surface, that question may seem reasonable, but my response to that argument is that we all rely on public education whether we directly have children in the system or not.  If you expect 911 to function properly, you rely on it.  If you hire employees for your business, you rely on it. If you ever conduct any form of business transaction in any public setting, odds are that you’ve relied on public education because you have an expectation of competence from the other party.  Right now, as business models and manufacturing principles are applied to the system, our teachers are incapable of effectively teaching what really matters.  Instead, they are busy stuffing minds full of quantifiable information and prepping for the standardized tests, and we already have enough experience with this model to see that it is failing.

Currently, the trend in education, implemented by a top-down hierarchy, is to apply lean manufacturing principles into the system.  In short, it means speed up the system to find where it breaks, improve that area, speed up some more until it breaks again, and repeat.  In manufacturing, where speed and efficiency are keys to success, this process makes sense.  However, real learning is not as simple as adding this part to that part to get this widget.  I’ve taken a look at students’ notes after I’ve gone through a lecture, and even though multiple students heard the exact same words at the exact same time, they have often written down something far from what I said.  In order for real learning to occur, a good teacher must be able to identify where students are straying off course and steer them back accordingly.  The faster the system runs and the more students per section, the more difficult this becomes.  Curriculum must become simplified and homogenized to ensure all students can follow along.  If I have to explain why that is a bad thing, you may be part of the problem.

In business, customers must be pleased.  Angry customers typically will not be repeat customers.  That’s a fairly simple concept.  If education runs like a business, how do you make the most customers happy in the short-term?  Well, you make learning fun.  You make sure students pass.  You make sure you don’t make the customers angry.  Those of you above the age of thirty or so, please think back to your best teachers, the ones who really taught you the most, the ones you appreciate today.  Did they ever hurt your feelings?  Did they ever push you to do better even when you thought you had done well?  Did they ever make you angry?  Those teachers are the ones being squeezed out of the system because they don’t keep the customers happy.  Real learning is hard work.  Real learning requires the occasional bruised ego.  But that’s not good for business, so guess what’s happening to real learning?

This year, the college where I teach removed all pretense about our current modus opeandi during our start up week.  To begin, our president, a man who I typically admire as a real education professional, laid out our four primary objectives: 1) get the students enrolled; 2) get them to show up on the first day; 3) keep them attending; and 4) get them across the stage.  Anyone notice what is missing?  After his opening, we were treated to a marketing presentation on how to make the workplace more exciting.  It was reminiscent of the morning meetings we would have when I worked in sales, a “go get em” pep rally type thing.  The marketing guy–a true pitch man if I’ve ever seen one–then proceeded to tell us that education is in fact a business and that our job is to make money from enrollment and also from alumni.  Again, no mention of actually teaching them anything.  During his section, I felt a little piece of my soul die.  After that, faculty were treated to a four hour presentation on how we need to make learning “fun” for the millennials because they bore easily.  The old methods, tried and tested over three thousand years of human development, are now obsolete because this generation prefers Google and YouTube to lectures and guided discussions.  That issue will be a different topic for a different post all its own.  My point here is that the college overtly expressed repeatedly that we are a business, that our jobs as teachers is now that of customer service rep.

Good teachers today are throwing up their hands and either giving up or walking away entirely.  Until business leaders recognize the abysmal failures of this new model and demand that education reverts to producing critical thinkers instead of test takers, we cannot properly do our jobs.  Until business leaders recognize that we cannot compete on a global scale with an ill-trained workforce, the system will not change.  Education is not a business.  It’s a long-term investment for businesses and communities, an investment that pays for itself through the innovations and efficiencies of the citizens it produces.  Until business leaders learn that lesson firsthand, we are headed for disaster under this current model.

Education Ramblings

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I’ve written on here many, many times about the frustrations of working as an educator and the many failings of our current system.  Over the next few weeks, I will attempt to chronicle in more detail just how badly we as a nation have crippled our future.  The system is broken beyond repair, and professional educators such as myself are being driven from the field because of the inhumane working conditions, tremendous workload, and nonsensical, overbearing regulations enforced by bureaucrats who know little about the true craft of teaching.  True education is about more than stuffing minds with quantifiable data and then measuring their retention of that information.  True education is about preparing human beings to function in the real world as productive members of society.  It’s about instilling work ethic, personal pride, self-motivation, self-discipline, and accountability into individuals while simultaneously providing them with complex skills necessary for success in the workforce and in life.

Here’s one example of our inhumane working conditions.  Today, I got ten minutes for lunch.  That’s ten minutes to heat up a bowl of soup and scarf it down between classes.  Ten minutes is not a reasonable, humane way to treat unskilled labor working at menial tasks.  It’s definitely not reasonable for highly skilled professionals charged with training people how to write, yet that is my reality every Monday and Wednesday.

On paper, my workload is 30 hours a week.  On paper.  Counting Sunday’s marathon grading session, I already have logged about 34 hours with at least 18 to go, and this will be a fairly light week in the semester.  This week alone I have graded 21 essays and a few hundred cold writing responses.  No exaggeration, a few hundred.  Oh, and I’ve taught, too.  And responded to dozens of emails.  And tracked attendance.  And completed several menial tasks that have virtually nothing to do with educating students.  An optimal workload for teaching students how is write is fifteen individuals per course and four courses per semester, or sixty students per semester.  Right now, I have 146 students in six courses.  There is no realistic way I can truly teach that many people how to write.  I can provide them with some generalized information about writing concepts, but I cannot learn their individual strengths and weaknesses and teach them how to improve their personal writing skills, at least not in a substantive way.

So for the next few weeks, the focus of this blog will become my effort to catalog the fundamental flaws within our current system and offer suggestions for how to fix these problems.  I have little hope that any of my suggestions will be taken seriously by those in power because I don’t represent a powerful lobbying group that can donate millions to their re-election bids, but maybe someone somewhere will find this blog in a hundred years and know that in America in 2013 there were professional educators who did care about students and did know how to teach.