Tuesday, January 26, 2016

An Open Letter to The Alabama Politicians Who Are Ruining Education


Dear Mr. Politician,

I can't remember a time that I did not want to be a teacher; all of that changed today.

Today I read an article explaining that Alabama teachers can expect their long awaited and much deserved raise in the next year or so, BUT they have some things that they are going to have to give up. Ha! Go figure. We teachers are used to this by now, but I would be lying if I said that this doesn't feel like a slap in the face. You're dangling the proverbial carrot in front of our faces, but I, for one, am not going to take this lying down.

I love my students, and I do not teach for the income. But, I do not enjoy feeling undervalued and I downright hate the way this implies that teachers as a whole are not doing their jobs. The problem with education is NOT too little accountability on teachers; the problem is too little accountability on the students and parents.We do not pay dentists based on cavities, we do not pay preachers based on saved souls, and we do not pay politicians based on approval ratings. Why does it make sense to you that we pay teachers based on approval ratings from students, test scores, and unannounced observations?

There are many variables that affect my students' performance in my class, and there is no way that I can control them all. If you want to fix problems in education, let's start in the home. Let's make sure that every student that walks in my room every day has a parent at home that made sure they left their home with a full stomach and the knowledge that someone loves them. Or at the very least, let's have a parent or guardian at home that makes sure that the student actually gets to school. Move accountability for attendance from the school to the parents and actually prosecute for truancy. When the students goes home at the end of the day, let's make sure that their parents or guardians ensure that they do their homework and talk to them about both the academic and social aspects of their school day. Let's let the responsibility for parent-teacher contact rest on the parent. If they need to know what is going on at school with their child, have them call on their free time rather than expect the teachers to make time in their already busy school day to call parents. That's impossible you say? Well I agree, but so is trying to improve education by making educators hate the very job they are called to do.

Let's allow the administration to actually, really punish the kids who do not behave according to the code of conduct. I can't tell you how many times I've had a special education student act horribly in class, violating LRE laws for every regular education student in the room, and my administrator's 'hands were tied' because the kid was receiving special education services. I love special education, but your laws are hurting many of the students that our special education teachers are trying to help. While we're on the topic of special education, let me just add that when I have a student that can't read or write come to my high school classroom, I hate what you've done with education so badly that I almost cannot participate in the charade anymore. This child does not need more legislation that tell us, him, and his parents that he cannot be 'left behind' and that he will 'progress with his regular education counterparts.' This child needs to be taught how to read, not how to solve a quadratic equation. All this talk about keeping kids from falling through the cracks, and here you are pushing them through. Mr. Politician, it is time to stop.

Let's remove graduation ratings and standardized test scores if you're not actually going to use them for student accountability. Sometimes students need to fail, and you need to trust the teachers when the students do fail. I love and care for each student that walks the halls of my school, but sometimes students need a little tough love. I meet each of my students halfway, and I believe with my whole heart and very well-educated brain that we are only hurting every student that we pass because we don't have the 'documentation' to fail them. I bend over backwards to help and teach students every single day, and I will not sit aside and let any politician imply that I do not already do enough for my students.

So, no, Mr. Politician. You've got it wrong. Teachers are not the problem with education, and YOU are NOT the solution. You are never going to fix education by creating more legislation; the only way to fix it is to leave the solution up to us, the very capable, hard working, well and properly educated teachers. If you keep pushing your agenda, I can promise you that the only thing you are going to accomplish is pushing good, loving, talented teachers into other professions and leaving our students to flounder.

Very Sincerely,
An Alabama Educator

Sunday, January 10, 2016

Building with G


Since the new year is...well, new, I have been thinking about all of the blessings that we hope God will rain down on us in the coming year. The most notable of these is the fact that we've been blessed with the opportunity to build our forever home! 

I have been looking forward to building my dream home with the man of my dreams since I was a little girl, and I am so excited that we have finally made it to that point in life. Since we married, I have been slightly obsessed over the building process. My poor hubs has had to listen to my plans for our future home every. single. day. for the past three or four years. Lucky for me, he's a trooper, and he listened to me intently just like we were breaking ground in the next few days. He was never as focused on this one dream as me, but I've finally brought him over to my side. He announced very haphazardly on Christmas Eve that we'd be celebrating Christmas next year in our newly built house. 

Because I have focused nearly all of my "spare time" (I'm a teacher. Spare time. Ha!) on the house of my dreams and also because my husband can be likened to a freight train when he has a goal, the ball started rolling pretty quickly. Within a week, we were approved and had our house plans in our hands and the hands of almost all of the appropriate people. 

We have been in three different building supply stores, each at least two times, this weekend. Side note: Home Depot has BY FAR the most helpful people. We went into two different Lowe's stores, and no one ever offered to help us. We have books about cabinetry, books about flooring, books about countertops, books about bathrooms. There are so, so, so many decisions to make. I thought I knew what I wanted until I saw how many options I had. Add Pinterest to all of those tangible options, and I start to lose my mind. 

This home will be our forever home; we will be a growing family, a family with teenagers, empty nesters, and retirees in this home. It's impossible to plan for all of that. I had imagined that building a house would include making a lot of decisions, but I never knew there were this many options for everything. So far, the only decision we've actually made is what house we're building and where we're going to build it. Lord, help us! 

Oh yeah, I've also decided that I really need Joanna Gaines to come make all of my other decisions for me. That would help a lot!