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QUIT PICKING ON PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHERS!
A
recent newspaper column criticized Gov. Sonny Perdue for not doing enough
to get rid of “incompetent teachers.” I assume the comment was intended as
a political shot at the governor, but it splattered on schoolteachers and
I didn’t like it. I have a son and son-in-law who are high school
teachers. I know how hard their jobs are. I wouldn’t do it, and I doubt
most of you would either, yet those of us who don’t have the foggiest idea
of what goes in the classroom find it convenient to dismiss schoolteachers
as incompetent and responsible for all that is wrong with public
education.
It
would be helpful if someone would define “incompetent teachers.” While
doing that, would they also include definitions for incompetent
administrators, incompetent school board members, incompetent bureaucrats
and incompetent politicians? That only seems fair. For example, are
teachers incompetent who find themselves stuck in the poorest school
systems in Georgia, where there isn’t enough money for even the most basic
teaching materials?
Do
teachers become incompetent after getting snarled in miles of red tape
from federal- and state-mandated accountability programs to which they
have little input? Is it because politicians and bureaucrats think they
have the answers on how to improve public education that teachers are
given so little say about what they teach, how they teach and when they
teach? Is it because we don’t trust their judgment, even though they are
the ones on the firing line? Is there some logical reason that we can’t
leave teachers the hell alone and just let them teach?
Do
teachers become incompetent by coming to class two hours early each day
with supplies they purchased out of their own pockets because the school
system either can’t or won’t purchase them? Or is it from grading papers
and working on lesson plans at night, while distracted by the student they
know has unlimited potential but is not showing it in class? So, the
worried teacher calls the parent to see what is going on and finds out
that the parent doesn’t have a clue and doesn’t care. In this case, is the
teacher incompetent, or could it be the parent? Any chance politicians
will pass a law that will let the governor get rid of incompetent parents?
Perhaps
teachers become incompetent from dealing not only with apathetic parents
and their equally apathetic children, but with know-it-all education
“experts” who couldn’t teach the 3 Rs for a living if you spotted them the
first two Rs? Then throw in meddlesome school boards, budget cuts, more
accountability and less responsibility, drugs, weapons, dress codes,
discipline problems, social promotions, lawyers, publicity-seeking
politicians, anonymous bureaucrats and second-guessing media.
Is it
solely the teachers’ fault that Georgia finished 50th out of 50 states in
SAT scores? Or does some of the responsibility rest with us? We chant the
mantra of educational excellence, but not if it means paying more taxes or
requiring some coddled athlete to crack the books if he wants to get the
ball on Friday nights. Criticizing overworked and underpaid public school
teachers as the problem is both easy and wrong. There is more than enough
blame to go around.
Maybe
we pay our incompetent teachers too much money. After all, Atlanta Braves
pitcher Greg Maddux has to throw twelve pitches in one inning of one game
in one season before he makes as much as these incompetent teachers make
in a year. And we all know how much more of a contribution Maddux is
making to the well-being of our society than our teachers.
I hope
Gov. Perdue gets rid of all those incompetent teachers as the writer
suggested. Maybe politicians and bureaucrats then will hold the remaining
teachers to the same high standards they place on themselves. And don’t
worry about replacements. I am sure plenty of people are willing to put up
with the lack of support and constant sniping that public school teachers
endure daily.
In the
meantime, I suggest we quit picking on public school teachers. Let them do
what they are perfectly capable of doing without our interference. Let
them teach.
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