Thursday, July 15, 2010

Teaching for America

 "Just passing through."

"A threat to public education."

"Just building their resumes before moving on with their lives."

There has been a lot of debate about Teach for America, lately. The NY Times covers Teach for America quite a bit, I'm guessing because the NYC corps of Teach for America members is the largest in the nation. But, in almost every article I read, there is a general pattern that is followed, almost exactly, every time.

It goes like this:

1. Teach for America is in the news for another amazing accomplishment, like TFA teachers raising test scores in their classrooms more than other traditional teachers.

2. An explanation of what TFA is - a corps of stellar recent college graduates who work in some of the most difficult classrooms in America. Invariably, these days, there is mention of how incredible it is, in this economy, that almost 20% of the top graduates at many Ivy League schools are applying to Teach for America instead of Deloitte and Touche.

3. Of course, "there are critics" who criticize Teach for America because, as I put some of the quotes at the top of my blog post here, we are just passing through. We are not committed to the cause of teaching. We are just rookies using these hard to staff schools as a social experiment. We are not possibly as great as a veteran teacher. We should be ashamed of ourselves for just using already poor and disadvantaged students just to build our own resumes.

4. The article will usually finish by summarizing the amazing accomplishment that they originally wrote the article about in the first place.

I have never been asked to contribute to these articles, but I figure I have a blog with a readership of 6 people who I can vent my frustration to about this topic. And for full disclosure, I was a Teach for America teacher from 2004-2006 in the Baltimore City Public School System.

Here's how my article would be written:
1. Teach for America teachers THROUGH OUT AMERICA, placed in some of the hardest to staff schools, are accomplishing amazing things with their students.

2. Teach for America is a corps of recent college graduates from schools THROUGH OUT AMERICA, with diversity of ethnicity, culture, personality and opinion not seen in the traditional teaching pool. Individuals come from amazing schools, including small liberal arts schools like Whittier College (my college - nope, it's not an Ivy League, but frankly, I too am frustrated that TFA is branding itself more as a bastion of the Ivy Leagues, instead of pushing the fact that the majority of its greatest teachers come from Colleges like mine. In fact, my first year teaching, one of my housemates was from Dartmouth - he couldn't hack it. Funny, the small liberal arts school kid - me - was awarded Rookie of the Year that year by my school.)

3. There are critics - insert the oft-repeated and tired quotes that I have above. But, let's add that the very schools that they criticize Teach for America for abusing are certainly NOT being inundated with the veteran teachers these nay-sayers demand to see in those classrooms. Additionally, not even the majority of traditionally trained teachers who dedicate their lives to the profession are interested in staying at these difficult schools for their whole career. But nobody who is criticizing Teach for America - usually Professors in Colleges of traditional Teacher Preparation - is offering a better solution that is also viable (and, most ironically, most of them wouldn't dare go teach in the schools Teach for America places at, either!) Either put your money where your mouth is, or shut up and move out of the way so that those of us who would rather do instead of just say can get stuff accomplished!

4.  What other articles often fail to recognize or state is that Teach for America, at the heart of its mission, includes for the very fact that not every individual attracted to the program will stay in a classroom for over two years. Solving the problems of educational inequity - the so-called "achievement gap" - won't be accomplished if we only attack the problem within the field of education. What these big-mouthed, degree-laden education professors seem to be continuously missing is that we NEED people in our nation who worked in a school for a few years to get a better grasp of the problems faced by our students, so that they can then present plausible and solid solutions in whatever field they ultimately decide to dedicate their lives. Someone who has seen the challenge first hand can then make decisions in the arenas of housing, nutrition, healthcare, transportation, etc more effectively. THIS IS THE POINT!

5. My article wouldn't end with a summary of the amazing accomplishment - most people have pretty much figured out that Teach for America is a good thing. I would end, instead, with a plea. My favorite colleagues at the school I worked at in Baltimore, were my favorite because they were supportive, provided helpful hints and feedback through those challenging first months of teaching. They neither put me on a pedestal nor disdained me merely for the fact that I was a Teach for America member. They treated me like they would any other colleague - once I earned their trust and respect, we were a solid family. If we hope to raise our profession, we can't just sit idly and wish things stayed the way they were 20 or 30 years ago. We can't propose "solutions" that sound great but are not feasible, like super monetary incentives to get veteran teachers in these difficult classrooms - especially in this current economy! We must stop blaming and putting each other down. Rather, we should be the ones dictating the discourse for the future of education! We should not be allowing people who haven't ever been close to the front lines to be dictating teacher contracts and prescribing solutions. WE should be at the forefront of the positive changes necessary for our children. Ultimately, it must stop being about the adults and start being about creating amazing, life-changing, unforgettable educational experiences for the children we serve.

And the very last sentence in my article would challenge the biggest assertion by critics. I would include this quote from Donna Foote, author of "Relentless Pursuit: A Year in the Trenches with Teach for America". She writes, "there are much easier ways to burnish a resume than a two-year commitment to hard labor in some of the crummiest classrooms in America." Indeed.

4 comments:

  1. Powerful Hovig!!! And I doubt many of your students or the students of many other TFA teachers have much criticism to spew...You are a gift to every student you teach to every person who knows you and TFA provided an amazing platform for you to spread your wisdom, light, and love!

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  2. Good Call, Hovig! I'm always really frustrated when the articles talk about how TFA-ers aren't going to be as strong as seasoned veterans. There's always an implication that the districts are hiring TFAers instead of someone else. I always tell people that, at the schools where I worked, the option was never to hire me or to hire an experienced teacher. The option was to hire me or have a long term sub with a high school diploma sit in the back of the room for the whole year. I also don't think that those articles ever take a look at some of the people who started as TFA corps members and have continued teaching. I'll be going into my 6th year of teaching next year, and the experience that I got as a corps member in Baltimore has been invaluable to my understanding of the profession. Plus, it rocks to know that I've got all sorts of connections around the country with people who are still in the classroom or have moved into another realm, who shared the same experience that I did in B-more. Thanks for sharing!

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  3. I very sincerely hope that TFAers do turn to politics and big business and use that power to change the public education system. As a teacher who teaches in one of those "challenging" schools, and wants to be there, I know that TFA is doing a good thing when teachers like you Hovig are the ones in the classroom. But, as you and I both know, until the bigger issues are solved...and test scores stop being more important than children getting 3 full meals and a safe please to sleep; we are going to be in a world of hurt. But thank you, and anyone else out there who chooses to educate our youth.

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  4. Why do they never question WHY these schools are so difficult to staff??? Seems we should be thanking TFA educators for willingly taking up the challenge. A new teacher is no different than the military recruit that is put thru basic training and then sent to the front lines of war. Teachers, just like soldiers are the brave individuals who willingly "go into battle" and use their talents to try and make a difference. I say it is time to say THANK YOU to the few good men and women who stand at the front line of education and try to make "scholars" of young minds who have been deprived of the basics like having a positive role model in their life, being exposed to beautiful things like the ocean that is walking distance from home, someone at home who cares enough to make sure they do their homework and get proper nutrition and rest before coming to school. Critics should focus their attention on these kinds of issues instead of insinuating that societal ailments can miraculously be cured by Teachers!! I for one say Thank you to teachers who care enough to try and make a difference...

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