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Monday, November 28, 2005

The Wages of Teaching

The Wages of Teaching
By Anna Quindlen

A couple of years ago I spent the day at an elementary school in New Jersey. It was a nice average school, a square and solid building with that patented classroom aroma of disinfectant and chalk, chock-full of reasonably well-behaved kids from middle-class families. I handled three classes, and by the time I staggered out the door I wanted to lie down for the rest of the day.

Teaching's the toughest job there is. In his new memoir, "Teacher Man," Frank McCourt recalls telling his students, "Teaching is harder than working on docks and warehouses." Not to mention writing a column. I can stare off into the middle distance with my chin in my hand any time. But you go mentally south for five minutes in front of a class of fifth graders, and you are sunk.

The average new teacher today makes just under $30,000 a year, which may not look too bad for a twentysomething with no mortgage and no kids. But soon enough the newbies realize that they can make more money and not work anywhere near as hard elsewhere. After a lifetime of hearing the old legends about cushy hours and summer vacations, they figure out that early mornings are for students who need extra help, evenings are for test corrections and lesson plans, and weekends and summers are for second and even third jobs to try to pay the bills.

According to the Department of Education, one in every five teachers leaves after the first year, and almost twice as many leave within three. If any business had that rate of turnover, someone would do something smart and strategic to fix it. This isn't any business. It's the most important business around, the gardeners of the landscape of the human race.

Unfortunately, the current fashionable fixes for education take a page directly from the business playbook, and it's a terrible fit. Instead of simply acknowledging that starting salaries are woefully low and committing to increasing them and finding the money for reasonable recurring raises, pols have wasted decades obsessing about something called merit pay. It's a concept that works fine if you're making widgets, but kids aren't widgets, and good teaching isn't an assembly line.

McCourt's book is instructive. Early in his 30-year career, he's teaching at a vocational high school and realizes that his English students are never more inspired than when forging excuse notes from their parents. So McCourt assigns the class to write excuse notes, the results ranging "from a family epidemic of diarrhea to a sixteen-wheeler truck crashing into the house." Pens fly with extravagant lies. You can almost feel the imaginations kick in.

The point about tying teaching salaries to widget standards is that it's hard to figure out a useful way to measure the merit of what a really good teacher does. You can imagine the principal who would see McCourt's gambit as the work of a gifted teacher, and just as easily imagine the one who would find it unseemly. Tying raises to pass rates is a flagrant invitation to inflate student achievement. Tying them to standardized tests makes rote regurgitation the centerpiece of schools. Both are blind to the merit of teachers who shoulder the challenging work of educating those less able, more troubled, from homes where there are no pencils, no books, even no parents. A teacher whose Advanced Placement class sends everyone on to top-tier colleges; a teacher whose remedial-reading class finally gets through to some, but not all, of a student group that is failing. There is merit in both.

The National Education Association has been pushing for a minimum starting salary of $40,000 for all teachers. Why not? If these people can teach 6-year-olds to add and get adolescents to attend to algebra, surely we can do the math to get them a decent wage. Since the corporate world is the greatest, and richest, beneficiary of well-educated workers, maybe a national brain trust might be set up that would turn a tax on corporate profits into an endowment to raise teacher salaries. Maybe states and communities could also pass regulations with this simple proviso: no school administrator should ever receive a percentage raise greater than the raise teachers get. Neither should state legislators.

In recent years teacher salaries have grown, if they've grown at all, at a far slower rate than those of other professionals, often lagging behind inflation. Yet teachers should have the most powerful group of advocates in the nation: not their union, but we the people, their former students. I am a writer because of the encouragement of teachers. Surely most Americans must feel the same, that there were women and men who helped them levitate just a little above the commonplace expectations they had for themselves.

At the end of his book McCourt, who is preparing to leave teaching with the idea of living off his pension and maybe writing—and whose maiden effort, "Angela's Ashes," will win the Pulitzer—is giving advice to a young substitute. "You'll never know what you've done to, or for, the hundreds coming and going," he says. Yeah, but the hundreds know, the hundreds who are millions who are us. They made us. We owe them.

Newsweek Nov. 28, 2005

Monday, November 21, 2005

Here I Go .... Thinking Again ....

My tutoring business is going well ... I have been busier and busier (more and more busy?) each week since I started in September ... and that is good. My evening sessions are now FULL ... unless I decide to tutor some 5-6 sessions, too. I am still trying to gather some more daytime work. I lost a family of 3 for my homeschool classes ... at least, I assume I lost them .... they have stopped coming and haven't called ... but they were having all kinds of issues with Divorce and Money and Moving and Transportation .... and now they are WAY behind ....

Anyway .... I will probably stay busy until Christmas Holidays. But after Christmas vacation, Lewisville Public high schools start over again with brand new students in brand new classes ... so almost all of my evening hours will be empty until students start failing and parents start calling ... around the last week in January.

In a way, that is good .... because I just found out that I need to have major abdominal surgery so I am scheduling it for Dec. 28th and will be recovering for most of January, anyway.

But it is bad because if I don't work, I don't make money ... and if I don't make money ... well ... then things get tight around here!! And I don't like that!!

So .... I have been thinking .... which is quite often a very dangerous thing for me to do ... but I couldn't sleep one night so my little brain just started churning .... How can I make money without actually working?? Especially during the summer when I want to be off ... but still want money coming in ... (that was one nice thing about being a teacher ... those summer paychecks!!)


Well ... in the Summer I did a lot of TAKS Exit Level Math tutoring for students who failed the TAKS Math section in the Spring of their Junior year. They have to pass all 4 sections of the TAKS in order to graduate at the end of their Senior year. Many of them choose to re-take the Math section in July when it is offered again. So I picked up some work tutoring those kids. And it was good work and good money .... but basically I was doing the same problems over and over again for each new student I got ... saying the same things ... making the same lame jokes ... telling the same stories .... empathizing with the students .... cursing the evilness of all things TAKS, etc. And I was paid $40/hr to do this over and over again .... usually for 10 hours each student .... that's $400 (for those of you who don't know Math). And that is a lot of money for people to spend .... many many cannot afford that kind of personal one-on-one help!

Soooo .... I got to thinking .... what if I make a DVD or an Interactive CD for the computer of ME teaching TAKS. Me doing the very problems out the the very book that all student who fail the TAKS get for free from the State? Me being Me .... Irreverence and all. The book has lots of problems for each of the 10 objectives ... and it has answers AND written explanations for each problem .... but some people need to SEE the problem done ... and HEAR the problem explained to actually begin to understand.

What if I make this video ... in some usable format ... and sell it to people who need help? Then they have me right there on their computer ... and they can pause and rewind and listen and learn .... and if they still need personal help ... they can hire me. We could sell this CD/DVD for a very reasonable price ... like $40. AND we could let people download stuff from my website ... maybe have it set up by Objective ... let them download an Objective for $9.99 .... thinking ... thinking ... thinking ....

That way .... I could do all the work ONCE ... on film ... and thousands could benefit from it!!

22,000 seniors DID NOT graduate last year because of TAKS. Isn't that awful??

Anyway .... we are going to try to run with this idea ... will need someone to film it and edit it for us .... and the supplies I'll need are minimal ... a white board ... markers ... TI-overhead thingy ... an overhead .... personality .... witt .... charm ....

And if it is a hit ... well we will take it from there ....



Friday, November 04, 2005

Hodge Podge ...

This is just a collection of thoughts on all kinds of things that have been happening recently ....

My business is doing well. I am very pleased with that. Many of my tutees are being very successful and that is also very rewarding to me! Some of my tutees have to pay for my services themselves ... money out of their pockets, not their parents' ... and those kids work VERY hard. Just paying for a tutor does not guarantee success ... they still have to put the effort in ... and so many of my students do work so hard ... so it is wonderful to see them being successful!!

I am a bit worried about December and January. I only get paid when I actually work ... and the last two weeks of December are going to be Holidays for most people which means they won't be needing tutoring! That means my December income will be cut in half compared to previous months ... just when I'll need the $$ to do Christmas shopping. Tom and I have already decided that Christmas this year will be very lean ... lean but meaningful!!

The first week of January is also Holiday time ... and LISD schools start their classes all over again .... new kids taking Geometry and Alg. II and such .... no one will be failing until about 3 weeks into January .... then I will start getting calls for help .... so January will be a very lean month, too.

I do have several students from area Private Schools ... and they take their Math classes year round .... so I will continue to see them. And I'll still have my Homeschool Kids every Wednesday. Word of mouth is slowly spreading ... I am hoping to gather more homeschoolers ... and more Private School students .... it will take time ... I need to be patient ....

On a different note .... Tom turned on the Dallas Mavericks game two nights ago and they were playing the Utah Jazz in Utah. Normally I wouldn't care .... however .... my ex-student from TCHS got drafted by the Utah Jazz!! Deron Williams was a 1st round draft pick ... picked #3 ... and there he was STARTING for the JAZZ!! It was so awesome to watch him play ... and man did he do a great job!! It is so neat to see one of my old students playing well for an NBA team. It is so wonderful to see a young man ... who proclaimed to me during his Sophomore year of HS that he was going to be a Pro-basketball player .... actually do just that!! WOW!! I am so proud of you, DERON!!

And on another totally different note ... I read in the Dallas Morning News that SMU is going to study the "Science of Education". They are going to try to test different theories of education to find what really does work!! I applaud them!! I would love to be able to add my 2 cents to the mix. I have lots of my own theories which I think are very important to a student's success in the classroom, Kids loved my ideas and were successful under them .... but the other teachers I worked with over the years always hated me and my ideas ... and hated that the kids liked them ... I wish I could prove scientifically that my ideas do work ... and if everyone applied them the state of education would be much improved. Maybe I will look into SMU's study further ... they are here in Dallas ...