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appalachiablue

(41,140 posts)
Tue Sep 6, 2022, 11:21 PM Sep 2022

In Praise of Teachers - Robert Reich

- In Praise of Teachers. The start of another school year: a tribute to our teachers and to the one who changed my life. By Robert Reich, Common Dreams, Sept. 6, 2022. Today marks the start of the school year for many public schools. Which makes me think of Alice Camp. (I wrote about her some months ago. Many of you have asked me to repost what I wrote—and add a bit more about her and about our teachers. So here goes.)

I don't think there's a "teacher shortage." I think there's a shortage of teaching jobs that treat educators with the dignity—and give them the pay—they deserve.

I arrived in Mrs. Camp's third-grade classroom in Lewisboro Elementary School, in South Salem, New York, as an extremely short, shy, insecure 8-year-old who was often bullied and mocked on the bus and made to feel like a loser on the playground and had no particular interest in school. But she saw in me something I didn't see. She fed me books, projects, ideas. She challenged me and praised me. She made me feel special. Her slightly whacky sense of humor connected with mine. Her curiosity fueled mine (she didn't mind if I stayed in at recess and barraged her with questions). Her enjoyment of literature made it okay for me to love books.

She made me understand that I wasn't a freak, that I might even be talented, that the drawings and writings I did (up until then alone at my small desk in my bedroom) were okay—perhaps even good. And there was no reason for me to be so sad and ashamed, so fearful, so alone in the world. I think of Mrs. Camp when I see America's teachers blamed these days for almost everything imaginable—yelled at by parents over masks, reprimanded by school boards about books they assign or let their students read, vilified by politicians for teaching about America's history of racism, even told to arm themselves against the possibility that their classrooms will be invaded by murderous young men with semi-automatics.

That's wrong. Instead of berating our teachers, we should honor them. Instead of imposing ludicrous demands on them we should free them to teach and inspire. Instead of demeaning them we should express our gratitude to them—every day. And we should pay them twice as much as they're now earning, or three times. Did you know that 94 percent of America's teachers have had to dip into their own pockets to buy school supplies? This, at a time when the average Wall Street employee bonus for 2021 hit $257,500.

Why in hell should investment bankers get paid fortunes for moving money from one set of pockets to another, when our teachers can barely afford to live on what they make? Bankers watch over our financial capital. Teachers watch over our human capital—and therefore our future. I don't think there's a "teacher shortage." I think there's a shortage of teaching jobs that treat educators with the dignity—and give them the pay—they deserve. I never saw Alice Camp again after third grade ended for me that June of 1954. I never had a chance to thank her...

https://www.commondreams.org/views/2022/09/06/praise-teachers

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In Praise of Teachers - Robert Reich (Original Post) appalachiablue Sep 2022 OP
Investment bankers blah blah blah. Abolishinist Sep 2022 #1
That happens often. BigmanPigman Sep 2022 #3
Yep. We've had abt 40% staff turnover in 3 years, a lot of it having to do with the appearance of GPV Sep 2022 #4
K & R to infinity.... bahboo Sep 2022 #2

Abolishinist

(1,300 posts)
1. Investment bankers blah blah blah.
Wed Sep 7, 2022, 12:06 AM
Sep 2022

My nephew's wife, who I consider to be an extraordinary person, recently quit her high school teaching position because of the stress put on her by the higher-ups, i.e. the top-level administrators and the school board. They micro-managed everything, calling her into the office if a student complained about anything, whether it was ignoring them, treating them 'badly', or any other manufactured complaint they could muster... none without any supporting evidence.

BigmanPigman

(51,608 posts)
3. That happens often.
Wed Sep 7, 2022, 01:35 AM
Sep 2022

Teachers go through Hell in so many ways and most people have no clue. We are treated like crap by administrators and school boards, parents and students all the time. It is an awful career choice and that is why such large numbers off teachers quit after just a few years. Since teaching has been a profession of mostly women they have been mistreated and disrespected for a very, very long time and that also accounts for the low pay compared to other professionals with the same education and experience. Teacher burnout is a real thing.

GPV

(72,377 posts)
4. Yep. We've had abt 40% staff turnover in 3 years, a lot of it having to do with the appearance of
Wed Sep 7, 2022, 04:38 AM
Sep 2022

unfairness in in-house hiring practices.

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