Teacher Tech blog with Alice Keeler

Paperless Is Not a Pedagogy

Alice Keeler

Good Teachers, Uncertain Future

Good Teachers, Uncertain Future

@lhighfill what if teams had to fire their newest players regardless of their contributions to the team or talent for the game? #stupid

 It is that time of year, good teachers are getting pink slipped.  Not because they are not talented…. just because they are new.  Somehow the solution to the budget problem is to cut new teachers.  I am seeing really talented teachers losing their jobs, this seems to fly in the face of my belief that if you work hard you will succeed.  

 

Keeping teachers in the field is often cited as an issue, many teachers leave the profession within the first 5 years.  Uncertain employment regardless of talent certainly can not help quality people feel that the teaching profession is where they want to be.

 

I find I have a hard time recommending to friends that they should go into teaching.  Knowing that finding a job will be challenging, that wages are dwindling, the threat of a 3 week furlough by the state and the high probability of getting repeatedly pink slipped… it would seem foolish to enter the profession.  

 

As a parent I am particularly outraged by this. Do we not all want excellent, innovative and talented people teaching our children?  I understand that the budget situation is bad, but sacrificing the future is not the way to balance the budget.

 

 

3 thoughts on “Good Teachers, Uncertain Future

  1. I have quit recommending teaching as a profession and now warn people away from the profession. Teachers are treated so badly and not allowed to teach but rather to give standardized tests. Even good teachers, with great methods and classroom management, have to become formulaic in their teaching.

    1. Not entirely, but I don’t think that seniority should be the sole indicator. I have seen a qualified younger teacher with a degree in the subject be let go due to budget reasons and someone who has never taught that subject, nor has a passion to, be asked to take their place. This is not what is best for kids. Releasing dynamo younger teachers discourages them from staying in the profession, this is not a good thing. I also think it is wrong that it is cheaper to higher a new teacher so that when filling a position it is harder for experienced teachers to be hired. Kids deserve experience, that counts for a lot!

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