Republicans weaken education because they need the poorly educated to make up their voting base.
STEVEN SINGER in Common Dreams
Remember when federal, state and local governments actually seemed poised to do something about the great teacher exodus plaguing our schools?
With an influx of money earmarked to
help schools recover from the pandemic, many expected pay raises and bonuses to keep experienced
teachers in the classroom.
Ha! That didn’t happen!
Not in most places.
In fact, the very idea seems
ludicrous now – and this was being discussed like it was a foregone conclusion
just a few months ago at the beginning of the summer.
So what happened?
We found a cheaper way.
Just cut requirements to become a teacher.
Get more college students to enter
the field even if they’re bound to run away screaming after a few
years in.
It doesn’t matter – as long as we
can keep them coming.
The young and dumb.
Or the old and out of options.
Entice retired teachers to come back
and sub. Remove hurdles for anyone from a non-teaching field to step in and
become a teacher – even military veterans because there’s so
much overlap between battlefield experience and second grade reading.
And in the meantime, more and more classroom teachers with decades of experience under
their belts are throwing up their hands and leaving.
Stop and think for a moment.
This is fundamentally absurd.
If you have a hole in your pocket
and you keep losing your keys, wallet and other vital things from out of your
pants, the first thing you do is sew up the hole! You don’t keep putting more
things in your pocket!
But that’s only true if you’re
actually interested in solving the problem.
Maybe you prefer the status quo.
Maybe you even like it or see it as an opportunity to change your wardrobe entirely.
It’s a simple matter of cost.
The educators who have been in the classroom the
longest are also the highest paid. So if we just let them go,
we can save some money for other things.
Of course the problem of getting
excellent teachers in the classroom is only compounded by such thinking. You don’t get more seasoned teachers by letting them
leave and putting increasing pressure on those who stay.
And make no mistake – experienced teachers are incredibly valuable.
That’s not to say new teachers don’t have their own positive aspects, but the
profession’s expert practitioners are its heart and soul.
Think about it.
Like any other profession, the
longer you practice it, the better you usually get. For example, no one going
under heart surgery would willingly choose a surgeon who had never operated
before over a seasoned veteran who has done this successfully multiple times.
But we don’t value the work teachers do nearly as much as we
do surgeons. Or lawyers. Or almost anything else that requires
a comparable level of education.
That’s really the core issue.
We don’t care about quality
teaching. In fact, in many cases we actively don’t want it to occur.
Republicans are literally running a
political platform on weakening teachers, schools and education because they
need the poorly educated to make up their voting base.
When Trump was President, he actually praised the badly
educated because they supported him more than any other
demographic.
And even those who aren’t actively
against education are more concerned with privatizing the public system for profit. They
like it when public education fails because it gives them an excuse to push for
more charter schools, more school vouchers, more cyber schools – anything where they can siphon away tax dollars earmarked for education into
their own private pocketbooks (and no holes in there even to
pay their own taxes)!
So the teacher exodus isn’t being fixed on purpose.
It is a political and economic plot
against increasing the average intelligence and knowledge of voters, stealing
government funding for personal gain and refusing to increase the quality of a
government sponsored service.
In the meantime, more teachers are leaving every day.
A February 2022
report from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics said the numbers
of public school teachers had gone from approximately 10.6 million in January
2020 to 10 million — a net loss of around 600,000 teachers.
In August, the national Education
Association (NEA) sounded the alarm that an additional 300,000 educators had
left since the report was issued. And it’s only getting worse. An NEA union poll found that 55% of educators
were considering leaving education earlier than they had originally planned.
In my own district, there are
several teachers who have taken leaves of absence or are sick and had to be
temporarily replaced with long term subs. We’re located in western Pennsylvania
south of Pittsburgh, just across the river from a plethora of colleges and
universities with teacher prep programs. Yet it was pretty difficult to find
anyone to fill these positions or serve as day-to-day subs.
There is so much we could be doing
to encourage seasoned teachers to stay in the classroom beyond increased pay.
And that’s before we even get
to the lack of respect, gas lighting, scapegoating, and
micromanaging teachers go through on a daily basis.
What we have here is a crisis that
cuts to the very heart of America’s identity as a nation.
What do we want to be? A capitalist
experiment in school privatization whose only regulation is the free hand of
the market? Or a nation supported by a secure system of education that took us
to the moon and made us the greatest global superpower the world has ever
known?
What do we want to be? A nation of dullards who can be easily manipulated by any
passing ideologue? Or a country of critical thinkers who can accept
new evidence and make rational decisions based on facts?
There is a cost to becoming a great
nation and not just emblazoning the idea on a hat.
That cost is education. It is
paying, supporting and respecting veteran teachers.
Are we still willing to pay it?
Steven Singer is
a husband, father, teacher, blogger and education advocate. Singer is an 8th
grade Language Arts teacher in western Pennsylvania. He is a Nationally Board
Certified Teacher and has an MAT from the University of Pittsburgh. He is
Director of the Research and Blogging Committee for the Badass Teachers
Association. He is co-founder of the Pennsylvania-based education budget
advocacy group T.E.A.C.H. (Tell Everyone All Cuts Hurt). He often writes
at his own blog, gadflyonthewallblog.com.