While the corporate education reform movement is waiting for
Superman and beating the bushes for non-educators who will “teach like a
champion”, every day in thousands of classrooms across the country the real
heroes of public education are working to provide the best possible education
they can to children with widely varying backgrounds and preparedness for
learning, often in over-crowded and under-resourced classrooms and under the
cloud of a slanderous public relations campaign that seeks to make them out as
the villains in a reform fantasy.
Of course, the real heroes I am talking about are the
classroom teachers, building principals, and curriculum supervisors who have
studied education, who are certified to teach and who are not looking for a
quick exit to a more lucrative career, but are in the game for the long haul because
it is their life’s work.
I am thinking about these real heroes today for two reasons.
First, I read a research report in the Teacher College Record that at first I
thought I was going to like, but in the end made me angry. The study, by Stuart
S. Yeh, looked at charter school programs like Knowledge is Power Program
(KIPP) and Harlem’s Children’s Zone (HCZ) under the premise that they “may potentially be very effective in
closing the academic achievement gap.”
Yeh concluded that these programs were simply unsustainable
when “scaled up and implemented nationwide.” The reason? This is where I
started seeing red, so get ready. “The vast army of unemployed, highly
dedicated teachers that is required to implement KIPP and HCZ on a nationwide
basis simply does not exist.”
Not a flawed educational design. Not ignoring the harsh
realities of poverty. Not hiring unqualified temporary teachers. Not skimming
the student population to eliminate students with disabilities and English
Language Learners. Apparently the numbers of available teachers who have the
“right KIPP stuff” doesn’t exist. Especially considering that three year
attrition rates in KIPP and HCZ schools approach 50%.
So, not enough hero teachers. That’s the problem. What
constitutes a hero teacher for KIPP and HCZ? According to Yeh, a “highly
dedicated teacher in these programs” works long hours, teaches Saturday make-up
classes, gives students a cell phone number where they are available 24 hours a
day, visits student homes regularly, fosters students’ college aspirations and
dedicates a large portion of instructional time on test preparation. I wonder
why attrition is so high.
For me a real hero teacher in a KIPP school would be a
teacher who refused to drink the KIPP Kool-Aid, refused to abuse children with
hours of skill and drill test prep, refused to implement the draconian KIPP
discipline policies, resigned his position, walked out of the building and then
started a blog to expose charter school abuses. I am thinking maybe GaryRubinstein.
The second reason I am thinking about hero teachers is
because I had a chance to spend some time with some true hero teachers this
week. In my capacity as a literacy consultant, I often get a chance to observe
teachers at work. I never cease to be amazed at these dedicated, hard-working
professionals who are always striving to improve their practice.
I am thinking of Ms. C, who works with a population of
English Language Learners. She knew that her guided reading instruction was
helping these third graders, but she fretted that they would not perform well
on the new PARCC tests. The concern was clear in her eyes and her voice as we
discussed the challenges that ELLs have in comprehension as they continue to
work on their fluency in English. I tried to reassure her that her work was
making a difference no matter what the PARCC tests might report.
And then there was Ms. F, working in a lively classroom of
28 kindergarteners. The joy of learning was readily evident from the enthusiasm
the children showed for every task and also from the noise level that Ms. F
struggled mightily to contain. It was a happy room and there was great literacy
instruction happening. I saw one group of students taking some early tentative moves
to apply sight words they had learned to real reading situations.
After school and after her challenging 6 hours with her
troop of 5 year-olds, I happened across Miss F. as she held a hushed and
concerned conversation with the school nurse about a child who was often sent
to school unbathed and unkempt and arrived in class on this bone chilling
November day with no coat.
And then there was Mr. M, one of those rare male
kindergarten teachers I have a special affection for. I observed as he directed
his little ones to a variety of literacy centers and then sat down for an
outstanding literacy lesson with a group of children who were about to take off
in reading. Every comment Mr. M made was supportive and on target to help the
children develop both the skills needed to read and a sense of the joy of
reading. As the lesson ended Mr. M said to the children, “You guys are so
smart. I want you all to kiss your brain.” With that the children all kissed
their hand and tapped themselves on the forehead.
These folks are the real hero teachers. The real hero
teachers show up, day after day, year after year after year. The real hero
teachers are certified to teach. The real hero teachers studied education in
college and they apply that knowledge to the real, often difficult learning
situations they encounter. The real hero teachers seek graduate degrees in
education that will help them refine their teaching and they are open to the
kind of professional development that can help them hone their craft.
Ms. C, Ms. F, and Mr. M are heroes, but they are not
exceptions to the rule. They are typical of the teachers I have known and
worked with over the past 45 years. Good, honest, hard-working, intelligent
professionals doing the best they can. And the best they can is very good
indeed.
The notion that there are not enough heroic teachers to replicate
the KIPP or HCZ models is stupid. There are not enough of those teachers
because the model is fundamentally flawed and it seeks to draw people from
outside the profession, who may have a temporary commitment, but no desire to
stay the course. These are not dedicated teachers, they are temps. You cannot
build a lasting educational program with temp workers. You just need all the
Ms.Cs, Ms. Fs, and Mr. Ms you can find. You’ll find them in public schools.