While
millions of children (and teachers) welcome the call to go back to
school in August and early September, all is not well in classrooms
and school districts around the country. While every school district
is not facing challenges, many urban school districts – where
the majority of African American and Hispanic students are enrolled –
face challenges that may either disrupt children’s education or
affect the terms and conditions of work for teachers. Meanwhile,
some school districts are experiencing teacher shortages and an
unhealthy reliance on substitute teachers. Teachers are leaving the
profession more rapidly than before. And teachers of color,
especially men of color, are woefully underrepresented in the ranks
of K-12 teachers. Indeed, African American men represent just 2
percent of all teachers. Eighty-three percent of all teachers are
white, despite the fact that inner-city classrooms, particularly, are
overwhelmingly black and brown.
In
Chicago, teachers have returned to school without a contract for the
second year in a row, and the Chicago Teacher’s Union will take
a strike vote, proposing a strike in October. Meanwhile, the CEO
says that unless the CTU agrees to concessions, there will be
classroom cuts. The Chicago Public School district has already
“tightened its belt” by laying off more than 500 teachers
and 500 school-based workers. These workers may not be out of jobs,
as they can apply for other open jobs in the Chicago Public School
district, but leaning of a layoff in July is not the best way to
approach August with a positive attitude. Chicago is not the only
school district with challenges. Dozens of school districts have
financial challenges, which is partly because cities and states have
implemented austerity budgets that are allocating insufficient funds
to schools.
One
of the major challenges for school districts and for teachers is the
way that teacher pay lags behind pay in other professions. According
to the Economic Policy Institute, “public school teachers’
weekly wages were 17.0 percent lower than those of comparable workers
– compared to just 1.8 percent lower in 1994.” Those who
teach must have a passion for their profession, and for students, but
passion can often be dampened by low pay. Some young people who
would be great teachers choose alternative, better paying, careers.
And veteran teachers, who may have experienced pay freezes because of
fiscal austerity, may choose to make mid-life career changes because
more attractive financial opportunities beckon.
Why
can’t we pay teachers fairly? If the teaching profession is
considered as important as any other (and some might argue that it is
more important than many) why does teacher pay lag so much behind
other professions? As Lawrence Mishel and Sylvia Allegretto note in
their EPI study, “An effective teacher is the most important
school-based determinant of education outcomes.” The teaching
profession needs to offer pay at a level to attract the best and the
brightest to our nation’s classrooms. Otherwise, as a recent
study shows, few students aspire to be teachers – only 5
percent of college-bound students were interested in pursuing a
career in education in 2014. Is there any wonder? Nationally,
teachers earn just 77 percent of what other college graduates earn.
Meanwhile,
public education and public school teachers are often under attack.
Charter schools are seen as preferred alternatives; while most
research shows that charter school vary in quality. The good ones
are great, but the bad ones rival the worst public schools. And
school bureaucracies often snuff the creativity out of the best
teachers by burdening them with preparation for stifling standardized
tests that do little to engage students intellectually.
There
are some who believe that “anybody can teach”, which is
why the Teach for America model is so troubling. Teach for America
takes bright undergraduates and, after six weeks or so of training,
throws them into inner-city classrooms, implicitly undermining the
preparation that many take to get a degree in education. This notion
that “anybody can each” leads to the disdain that some
have for classroom teachers, and the resulting low pay that they
earn.
There
are a myriad of challenges in K-12 education, a major challenge is
that teachers are not too often paid sufficiently. Teachers deserve
more public support than they get now. They need better pay and more
autonomy. And they need to be unshackled from the frequency of the
standardized tests that they must too-regularly administer. We need
a pro-teacher movement.
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