Teacher Talk Nevada

TeacherTalk Nevada

Focus on: Waste
February 24, 2008

Socrates in Sodom

I read everything Chip Mosher writes. His Socrates in Sodom column has been appearing in Las Vegas CityLife virtually every week since January 2005. If you’re a Nevada teacher and haven’t yet discovered him, you owe it to yourself to check him out. Not only is Chip a talented and often hilarious writer, but he regularly turns up juicy reports on the scams and lunacies of our education overlords that will do your poor oppressed sense of justice genuine good.

All that said, however, Chip in one fundamental way is simply a nut. Now, everybody has a right to be a lunatic sometimes, and the reality is that virtually all of us ARE nuts in at least one or two areas of our lives ALL the time.

Continue reading "Socrates in Sodom" »


April 23, 2007

Why teachers quit

It would behoove Nevada's school districts' administrators to read the research regarding why teachers leave the profession, particularly Clark County. How many good teachers are driven out of the system in Nevada because of the same issues faced by Meghan Sharp? I've experienced the exact same frustrations she recounts and know of many other teachers in the same boat. Feel free to share your own frustrations and struggles.

Why Teachers Quit By Kimberly Palmer Teacher Magazine May/June Issue

It wasn’t her teenage students who drove Meghan Sharp out of teaching—it was the crippling inflexibility of her administrators.

All the innovative curriculum ideas and field trips she proposed to engage her 10th grade biology students were promptly shot down, and she left the profession after just two years.

“I still enjoyed teaching, but it was a constant battle with the administration,” says Sharp, who worked in an urban district in northern New Jersey. “I had to do things like submit weekly lesson plans. There was a lot of bureaucracy.” She now goes by her maiden name and asked Teacher Magazine not to identify her old school because she works as an education policy analyst.

According to a recent report on teacher attrition by the federal National Center for Education Statistics, her predicament—and her departure—are common in the profession. Among former teachers who took noneducation jobs, 64 percent said they have more professional autonomy now than when they taught. Only 11 percent said they’d had more influence over policies at school than in their current jobs.

65%: Proportion of former public school teachers who say they're better able to balance work and life now that they're working outside the education field.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education; National Center for Education Statistics Teacher Follow-up Survey.

The survey, based on interviews with more than 7,000 current and former teachers, also found widespread problems with workloads and general working conditions, and it notes that the percentage of teachers abandoning the classroom continues to grow. Among public school teachers, that proportion reached 8 percent in the 2004-05 school year—up from 6 percent in 1988-89.

The problem, experts say, is that teaching has gotten harder.
“As states have increased their reform orientation and their standards and accountability, a good chunk of that falls on the shoulders of teachers,” says Margaret Plecki, an associate professor in educational leadership and policy studies at the University of Washington in Seattle. Those changes, she notes, add up to increased pressure to perform.

In such a climate, teaching may not feel as rewarding, says Barry Farber, professor at Columbia University’s Teachers College. “My sense is that these numbers reflect the fact that many teachers are still struggling to feel consequential—to feel that their efforts are making a difference.”

The NCES study also showed that less-experienced teachers were particularly at risk of fleeing: 20 percent of public school teachers with no prior full-time teaching experience left during 2004-05—more than double the overall rate.

Jim Ahrens, chief operating officer at Resources for Indispensable Schools and Educators, a San Francisco-based nonprofit that helps public schools hire and retain teachers in low-income communities, says new teachers need extra help. “[They] are still trying to adjust to the rigors of teaching. It’s a very demanding profession, and those teachers are often left unsupported,” he says.

But the University of Washington’s Plecki points out that young people in all fields generally change jobs early in their careers. As shown by the NCES study, she says, “The vast majority [of teachers] are still in the classroom [after five years].”


April 9, 2007

Teach 4 Success is a joke

We have had in-services and observations under Teach 4 Success. I think the bottom line is the district is using it to blame teachers instead of the system for low student achievement. These pretended observations are drive by in nature. They claim they can "observe" student engagement and call it data by popping in a class for 10 to 15 minutes. Sleepy students who closed the late shift at Taco Bell drive down your "engagement" score. I think it’s a crock hidden behind their hard numbers, "data."

Here's what one Nevada school district reported in its District Improvement Plan:

T4S data indicate a decline between 2004-05 and 2005-06 in the percentage of classrooms where the application of effective Instructional Strategies were observed. • T4S observation data indicate formative assessments were not utilized in a majority (78%) of classrooms. Teachers did not maximize instructional time in 71% of the classrooms. • T4S observation data showed all students were not actively engaged in learning. Data showed that only 46% of the students were at the required 85 percent engagement level.

April 6, 2007

Why do we develop original lessons?

Reading about the concept of selling lesson plans got me to thinking why I spent so much time developing original lessons. It is a lot of work, but our love of the given subject and desire to teach it drives us. What's wrong with the textbooks and supplements? Non-teachers think the expensive district materials should be sufficient. They often are not.

I don't think I'm alone in viewing the textbook industry as a racket leaving me scratching my head over who wrote this stuff and questioning if they ever taught the particular level of students. Sometimes I've found blatant mistakes regarding the subject. The subjective nature of some presentations also motivated me to write objective materials when I found key information missing.


December 24, 2006

Doubletalk

By Yippee

One of the biggest problems in our public schools today, based upon my 23 years of employment experiences in three public high schools in two public school districts, is what I will refer to as 'doubletalk'.

School leaders, at the district level and the school level, talk about increasing standards and improving learning but do many things and create numerous programs that undermine any efforts to truly achieve these things.

Continue reading "Doubletalk" »


November 25, 2006

A Simple Suggestion

Continue reading "A Simple Suggestion" »


October 3, 2006

Let’s take back schools from ‘non-students’

Continue reading "Let’s take back schools from ‘non-students’" »


September 21, 2006

No more teachers, no more books

Welcome to the Microsoft-designed School of the Future

PHILADELPHIA -- Students enter this city's newest public high school through an invisible metal detector. They swipe "smart cards" to open their lockers, stowing jackets as they head to class with laptop computers.

More