Friday, December 17, 2004

Teaching

SHT is writing a series about teacher deficiencies in the State of FL.....overdue...I have long had concerns about the state of public education in the US, and even more so in Florida. Granted, there is no easy fix. There are mutliple culprits. Fed. & State governmenst need to take responsibility for enacting legislation which has hamstrung school districts... requirements are handed down ( and some of them are ludicrous) without the accompanying dollars to implement; institutes of higher ed need to take responsibility for graduating folks as teachers without giving these eager souls the correct tools to manage their future classes... it's simply not enough to have proficiency in your subject area; teachers need to take responsibility for not setting standards of personal dress (why do you want to look like your students? would you trust a doctor or lawyer who dressed so casually?) and decourum, classroom management (students want and need clearly defined, consistent and fair rules and regulations); parents need to take responsibility for the personal, at-home mangement of their progeny.... and not expect schools to turn at out-of-control hellion into a member of the choir of angels.

Public education is a priviledge and a right. At this point, I see both aspects being abused.

3 Comments:

At December 17, 2004 at 9:54 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

MS. Hillman

You have an interesting perspective on education.
In my view the number one enemy of our educational system is the unions.

They reward incompetancy, with the tenure system, and they refuse to hire individuals who would make great teachers only because they do not have the teaching credentials.

The credentials should be very clear. Do you know the subject, and can you impart this knowledge to your students.

I reccomend you take a look at the KIPP program, which is privately run but publicly supported. The first thing that they did was to get a tenure waiver, so that only the best are retained. Eveyone has a one year contract for life. All of the students are required to wear uniforms, consisting of a tee shirt with encouraging slogans and dress slacks or skirts. The students are selected by lottery, with siblings given priority. The waiting lists are enormous. You can see an interview from Sunday December 12,2004 by logging in to C-SPAN.ORG and viewing the interview with one of the founders.

Then you could become an advocate in your state for real reform.

Good luck with your BLOG!

 
At December 17, 2004 at 3:24 PM, Blogger Jo-Ann said...

Your comment about tenure is RIGHT ON! In no other profession, or line of work, are you guaranteed a job for life. How ridiculous!
Thanks for the reference to KIPP... will check it out!

 
At February 13, 2005 at 5:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

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