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Re: Teachers are the most important
- Subject: Re: Teachers are the most important
- From: Victor Steinbok <Victor.Steinbok@VERIZON.NET>
- Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 12:44:34 -0400
- In-reply-to: <F22gx8VUkRacUtI9dm50000061c@hotmail.com>
- Reply-to: Assessment Reform Network Mailing List <ARN-L@LISTS.CUA.EDU>
- Sender: Assessment Reform Network Mailing List <ARN-L@LISTS.CUA.EDU>
Mike,
I have always wondered if dismissing people because of the labels is
not very different than admiring them because of the same labels.
Should you not look at the message before judging? After all, you
have no idea why that label is attached to the author's name, do you?
The question appears to be whom is he trying to impress with his
credentials and would he be using those credentials if he was only
addressing his message to you. You can only make that determination
if you read what he wrote.
I have dismissed my share of people in the past, but I rarely do so
without establishing their position and point of departure. Should we
not look beyond labels?
VS-)
At 11:04 AM -0400 9/19/01, Mike Kluznik wrote:
Peter,
Thanks, but I'll pass on this one.
Mike
From: Peter Farruggio <pfarr@UCLINK4.BERKELEY.EDU>
Reply-To: Assessment Reform Network Mailing List <ARN-L@LISTS.CUA.EDU>
To: ARN-L@LISTS.CUA.EDU
Subject: Re: Teachers are the most important
Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 06:05:52 -0700
Mike,
I chose this piece because Anthony Cody is the real deal, a highly
respected (by other teachers and students), creative teacher in an
inner-city middle school.
He also runs a nice, teacher-friendly website. Check it out
http://tlc.ousd.k12.ca.us/~acody/
Pete
At 09:18 AM 9/18/01, Mike Kluznik wrote:
Peter,
The writer immediately loses credibility with me when he has to tell us
he's
NBPTS certified. There is a time and a place for such things; i.e. all
those who failed to make Eagle Scout when they were in the Boy Scouts
should
not now foist themselves upon us with there bogus credentials.
Mike
From: Peter Farruggio <pfarr@UCLINK4.BERKELEY.EDU>
Reply-To: Assessment Reform Network Mailing List <ARN-L@LISTS.CUA.EDU>
To: ARN-L@LISTS.CUA.EDU
Subject: Teachers are the most important
Date: Tue, 18 Sep 2001 07:32:00 -0700
Printed in the Oakland Tribune, op-ed section, Tues. Sept 18, 2001
http://www.oaklandtribune-ang.com/S-ASP-Bin/Ref/Index.ASP?puid=482&spuid=482&Indx=1093901&Article=ON&id=4393961&ro=3
Teachers are the most important
WHAT will it take to fix our schools?
Strong,
effective, qualified teachers must be front and
center. Unfortunately, though Oakland
schools
are making serious change a priority, the level of
teacher experience continues to be an
Achilles
heel.
Study after study has revealed that the most
important factor in a child's education is his teacher.
Preparation and experience are two critical
factors affecting teacher quality.
Five years ago the state reduced elementary
class sizes, creating an instant teacher shortage.
Policymakers took the easy way out,
eliminating the requirement that one hold a credential before
beginning to teach. The new system allows
you
to pass a skills test, promise to begin a training
program and begin teaching without an iota
of
preparation.
Districts like Oakland, which have the most
challenging teaching situations, are losing credentialed
teachers left and right because other
districts hire them away. As a result, while the state has 85
percent of its teachers with credentials and
a
strong district like Albany has 98 percent, Oakland
has only 75 percent.
What is worse, at some of the district's
middle schools fewer than 40 percent of the teachers hold
credentials. And the numbers at some schools
have actually gotten worse in the past three years,
in spite of a substantial pay raise. Not
surprisingly, test scores at these schools are some of the
lowest in the district. Thus, a
well-intentioned reform has had the effect of exaggerating inequity,
putting these students even farther behind.
There is a myth that anyone who knows how to
read and multiply ought to be able to teach. But
teaching is an art and a craft. New teachers
benefit tremendously from having a master teacher to
observe and emulate. When beginners are put
in
charge of a class without preparation or role
models, they are in a pressure cooker that
is
damaging to their students and to their own
development as professional educators. Many
promising beginners bail before they have a chance
to learn to be effective.
We need a process that honors the choice
beginning teachers are making, and gives them the
tools they need to succeed. In the medical
profession, an internship is a year of rigorous training
under the direct supervision of experienced
doctors. The supervision the interns in charge of these
classrooms get consists of a few visits a
semester from a university supervisor. We need a major
change that will reverse this practice.
Stop giving people without credentials sole
responsibility for teaching a class.
Place interns at the side of experienced
teachers, to learn from them, and eventually take charge
of the class under their supervision.
These interns should be in the classroom
half-time, with their afternoons free to attend classes in
content and methodology.
Interns should be paid half the salary of a
beginning teacher.
This will have the effect of raising the
student/teacher ratio in these classrooms, and give these
interns the induction into the profession
they
need. It will have the added consequence of helping
end the inequitable distribution of
credentialed teachers, allowing schools in Oakland to regain
their balance and get back on the path to
solid student achievement.
Anthony Cody is a national board-certified
teacher at Bret Harte Middle School in Oakland. He
lives in Berkeley.
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