Saturday, June 26, 2010

Everything I needed to know...

I learned in summer school... sounds funny, but its true... there are some observations that i have made over these past 12 days that are very likely going to influence the way i approach teaching from now on... whats yet to be determined is whether or not these changes are good things, or bad...

#1 kids today are far too used to getting it their way...

ive had more kids try to negotiate grading terms with me than i hope to ever experience in my life... too many of our children are asking for extra points, looking for crack in a teachers armor, only to pounce on any weakness and expose the fleshy parts for their classmates to devour... ive seen others crack under the pressure, ive felt it myself... kids repeatedly asking the same question over and over, waiting for frustration to set in, and the teacher to fold...

#2 kids are wrongfully being treated as adults.

its far too often that i see children treating their parents and other parental figures as equals. daughters talking to their mothers like they're sisters, and sons dismissing their mothers as if their words have absolutely no value at all... it really saddens me to see and hear these conversations take place... even worse to see the results in the classroom environment... some of these kids treat their teachers as things less than equals... truthfully, teaching IS a public service position, but being a public servant shouldn't subject us to such disrespect as some of us receive on a daily basis... this has to be put plainly on the people responsible for their rearing... either there is a lack of presence in the household, and the children are left to raise themselves, or the children are given far too many freedoms too early, and have taken those liberties too far...

#3 education has become a right, and not the privilege it used to be

this is probably the biggest complaint i have with NCLB... the fundamental belief behind the legislature is that ALL children should be afforded the same educational opportunities.. the flaw is that the financial side has basically forced the hands of the districts to get maximum funding by dragging in people that truthfully DON'T WANT TO BE THERE... these kids then devalue the education provided by distracting the masses... education is too readily available to the masses... i think once we start denying people access to education, we will see a decided increase in scholastic activity amongst the kids...

#4 teachers are not paid enough

ok, so this may be the most selfish of my observations, but it is very valid... as the professionals responsible for the future of the country, we are highly undervalued... there has to be a strong increase in salary, this would attract a more qualified educator, further increasing the educational value... simply put, if you paid teachers more money, you would get better teachers...

ill stop here for now, more later...

1 comment:

Faith said...

I agree wholeheartedly with your observations about the general attitude towards education that has become prevalent among high school students. It's sad.
It makes me appreciate my school, though. We actually have much less of that blatant disrespect that is commonplace in the average public school.
Reform is necessary. It's time for an education revolution.