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woodsprite

(12,255 posts)
5. I would give anything for my son to have such a talent development/gifted teacher like that!
Wed Apr 2, 2014, 12:59 PM
Apr 2014

It's not fair what they're doing to teachers who really teach, engage the kids, and love doing it. I wish I knew how to change it. Parents getting active doesn't seem to help much in driving the agenda as they essentially blow us off. I have a couple of friends (teachers) who are trying the administration route, but I don't know if they will be able to effect any change that way, or if it's even above that level. They're trying to talk others into flooding the admin and school board with supportive people, not people bought off by the charter/privatization agenda.

It's not fair to the kids if they're stuck with a teacher who really doesn't want to be there or put much effort into the job but gets lauded because they get 'decent' state testing scores. That's the case with my son's current 8th grade TD teacher. Some of the assignments for assessment grades this year have been carving a pumpkin (sent home justification that the assignment met district standards), forced to participate in Science Olympiad (as last minute participants - so no time to prepare - 5 month difference between the kids who signed up when it was a club offering in September vs. those made to do it for a class grade on January 27th.), love letters to soldiers and shut-ins, Doodle for Google, clothing/change donations for scholarship entry, the final project is for each student to teach an entire 1.5 hour class on the subject of their choice (must include a pre-assessment, homework, visuals (slides and handouts), hands-on group work, and post-assessment).

She did the teaching thing last year too (with no guidance to the students on the project other than "just teach what you know&quot . I just thought it was an easy way to lighten her load since she was new to the position and 7 mo pregnant at the time. She essentially got through the last month of last year without having to come up with a lesson plan. After struggling through this year with her, I think no lesson plan is just her MO. The person before her had very challenging, thought provoking but fun projects (The Poison Picnic comes to mind).

I hope he has a better experience next year when he starts high school! The sky is the limit when kids have great teachers!!!

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