Saturday, January 24, 2015
I Don't Know How to Teach Under EdReform
It's formal observation time at my elementary school. In the Chicago Public Schools, we have a new evaluation system that mandates a lengthy, complicated, and ridiculous process of administrators going into classrooms for formal observations at least three times a year for nontenured teachers like myself. During those observations, administrators are expected to record every little detail they observe over a forty-five minute period of time and then use these "snapshots" as a large part of our total evaluation.
In order to prepare for this observation, I was forced to create a very specific type of lesson, one carefully aligned to the Common Core State Standards and that follows our mandatory pacing guide dictated by our Network. I was expected to demonstrate that I used student data to guide my instruction. I needed to follow a very regimented lesson plan format that left virtually no room for creativity on my part.
I told myself I could make the lesson at least somewhat engaging for my students. I purposefully picked a high-interest reading passage that was culturally relevant to my students to use as my model and practice guide. I chose a fun, game-like way to introduce the skill as if that could mask the stink of what I was asking my students to actually do.
But it was after delivering this lesson, with a slight gleam of sweat on my brow from the anxiety of such an intense and punitive process, that I realized, I have no idea how to teach this way.
I don't know how to teach without context. I don't know how to teach reading without centering literature at the heart of it. I don't know how to teach the discreet "skills" of reading according to standards which tell me I must teach how to infer, how to compare/contrast, how to analyze author's technique completely divorced from the content. I don't know how to teach without inspiration or creativity. I don't know how to teach to data points. I have no idea how to go through a whole lesson without acknowledging my students for what they bring to the table instead of simply assessing if they left that table with the meaningless new "skill" lodged momentarily in their brains.
I did not learn to read by filling out a graphic organizer on plot structure. No one forced the ten-year-old me to repeat back literary terms or dissect a reading comprehension passage as if this was what reading is all about.
I read because I love it. My earliest memories of reading were of wonder, and curiosity, of staying up too late in bed with a book I couldn't put down.
It's true. I must be a "bad teacher". Because I don't know how to teach under edreform.
Sunday, November 30, 2014
Forget Winter, PARCC Is Coming...
My school is drowning under the ridiculous Common Core Standards. Everything I know to do to inspire my students is forbidden. Instead, we are forced to deliver truly horrible curriculum in developmentally inappropriate ways with pacing charts that move so fast all our heads are spinning. My students with special needs are shutting down, acting out, or just giving up entirely. Sometimes I hear them whisper, "I hate school". And they are right to think that. All the teachers are upset. And every time we ask "Why? Why are you making us do this?" the answer is always the same. PARCC is coming.
Today I read a piece about PARCC on Diane Ravitch's blog called Bob Shepherd: Why PARCC Testing is Meaningless and Useless which hit on something I don't feel like we've been talking about enough. Mr. Shepherd complains how PARCC and the Common Core are truly warping what reading means. He says, "...these are tests of literature that for the most part skip over the literature, tests of the reading of informative texts that for the most part skip over the content of those texts." I haven't heard many people complain about our skill-based reading instruction that has been in vogue since before CCSS, but now under the new standards is bad literacy on speed. We are teaching reading without enjoying words, or thoughts, or the context that created the stories we read. Even when we choose beautiful pieces of literature, they become lifeless vehicles to teach a dry, decontextualized skill.
For the past two weeks, my co-teacher and I were teaching off the standard that asks our fifth graders to compare and contrast two pieces of literature from the same genre. In my inclusion classroom, that looks like reading two myths without any teaching around what myths are, about Ancient Greece, about how the myths point to our own humanity. No, we are told to have the kids create a Venn diagram of the two texts and then practice writing a constructed response. The kids have no idea who Zeus or Hera are. They know nothing about the way myths were used to explain religion and nature to an ancient people. There is no chance to connect these ancient stories to the kids' own lives. I hear the kids mutter, "Why are theses such funny names?" But because we are on a strict pacing guide, and because the teaching of Greek Mythology is not in the standard, we simply moved on. This week we're on to comparing poems. In order to practice more constructed responses. To get ready for PARCC.
I cannot believe how we are warping the experience of reading for these children. Sometimes we are told to do a "close read"of stirring passages about the Underground Railroad for the sole purpose of pulling out the main idea and supporting details. We don't actually talk about the Underground Railroad-letting the horror of slavery sink in. No, it's simply about getting the skill, so the kids can demonstrate the same skill on the dreaded test. What a ridiculous disservice. I still remember my fourth grade teacher reading us a novel on Harriet Tubman and how that story was one of my first understandings of true injustice. We were inspired to create art projects, to write poetry, to pull out further texts on slavery from our library. We had class discussions. We wrote letters. We felt the text come alive. Our kids are not getting anything remotely like that experience. Because of PARCC.
And to make things worse, I teach at an all African-American school in a high-poverty neighborhood on Chicago's southside. Killing the love of reading before it starts for my students is nothing short of criminal. But because of the high-stakes nature of PARCC, knowing that schools just blocks away have been closed for their poor test scores, our school is in a sickening frenzy to raise our test scores by any means necessary. Everything revolves around this test. And my students who so desperately need safe, supportive, relevant, and engaging learning environments, instead are given high-pressured, standardized, test-prep CCRAP.
This type of readicide is not new because of PARCC. Schools under high-stakes accountability have been forced into this twisted form of reading instruction for many years. But things are getting worse, so much worse. Thanks to PARCC.
Any chance that kids get to become enthralled in a story, to become spellbound by a fictional world, to be pulled into the past through powerful prose, is done through teachers secretly stealing time for that wonderment. It is not in the standards. It won't be on the test. And it's definitely not in PARCC.
Today I read a piece about PARCC on Diane Ravitch's blog called Bob Shepherd: Why PARCC Testing is Meaningless and Useless which hit on something I don't feel like we've been talking about enough. Mr. Shepherd complains how PARCC and the Common Core are truly warping what reading means. He says, "...these are tests of literature that for the most part skip over the literature, tests of the reading of informative texts that for the most part skip over the content of those texts." I haven't heard many people complain about our skill-based reading instruction that has been in vogue since before CCSS, but now under the new standards is bad literacy on speed. We are teaching reading without enjoying words, or thoughts, or the context that created the stories we read. Even when we choose beautiful pieces of literature, they become lifeless vehicles to teach a dry, decontextualized skill.
For the past two weeks, my co-teacher and I were teaching off the standard that asks our fifth graders to compare and contrast two pieces of literature from the same genre. In my inclusion classroom, that looks like reading two myths without any teaching around what myths are, about Ancient Greece, about how the myths point to our own humanity. No, we are told to have the kids create a Venn diagram of the two texts and then practice writing a constructed response. The kids have no idea who Zeus or Hera are. They know nothing about the way myths were used to explain religion and nature to an ancient people. There is no chance to connect these ancient stories to the kids' own lives. I hear the kids mutter, "Why are theses such funny names?" But because we are on a strict pacing guide, and because the teaching of Greek Mythology is not in the standard, we simply moved on. This week we're on to comparing poems. In order to practice more constructed responses. To get ready for PARCC.
I cannot believe how we are warping the experience of reading for these children. Sometimes we are told to do a "close read"of stirring passages about the Underground Railroad for the sole purpose of pulling out the main idea and supporting details. We don't actually talk about the Underground Railroad-letting the horror of slavery sink in. No, it's simply about getting the skill, so the kids can demonstrate the same skill on the dreaded test. What a ridiculous disservice. I still remember my fourth grade teacher reading us a novel on Harriet Tubman and how that story was one of my first understandings of true injustice. We were inspired to create art projects, to write poetry, to pull out further texts on slavery from our library. We had class discussions. We wrote letters. We felt the text come alive. Our kids are not getting anything remotely like that experience. Because of PARCC.
And to make things worse, I teach at an all African-American school in a high-poverty neighborhood on Chicago's southside. Killing the love of reading before it starts for my students is nothing short of criminal. But because of the high-stakes nature of PARCC, knowing that schools just blocks away have been closed for their poor test scores, our school is in a sickening frenzy to raise our test scores by any means necessary. Everything revolves around this test. And my students who so desperately need safe, supportive, relevant, and engaging learning environments, instead are given high-pressured, standardized, test-prep CCRAP.
This type of readicide is not new because of PARCC. Schools under high-stakes accountability have been forced into this twisted form of reading instruction for many years. But things are getting worse, so much worse. Thanks to PARCC.
Any chance that kids get to become enthralled in a story, to become spellbound by a fictional world, to be pulled into the past through powerful prose, is done through teachers secretly stealing time for that wonderment. It is not in the standards. It won't be on the test. And it's definitely not in PARCC.
Saturday, October 18, 2014
How Testing is Destroying My School
Testing is out of control in our schools. I knew this before I stepped back into a
public school classroom this past September after teaching for many years in a
psychiatric hospital. But seeing the
testing obsession play out in students’ and teachers’ lives…well, I simply was not
prepared.
In just the first six weeks of school, I have administered
more pointless, random, unnecessarily difficult tests to my students than I can
count. We have barely had
more than two consecutive days to simply teach where we were not interrupted by
some ridiculous mandated assessment. There’s the REACH (for teacher evaluation
purposes only), On-Demand Writing Tasks, tests that go to our network, tests
for the district, tests because our school in on probation, and placement tests
to use the TWO online test prep programs our school is forced to use
weekly. These tests are not aligned to
the curriculum, they don’t measure what we are actually learning in class, they
are not tied to a broader unit of study.
These are tests just to feed the data monsters.
And thanks to Common Core, these tests are PURPOSEFULLY too
difficult for the students. We are told
kids should be frustrated and learn to “persevere”. They
need exposure to “complex text”. And we
need to measure what they don’t know so we can measure what they learn. But the reality is the kids are upset, they
are demoralized, they are learning that they are no good at school and that
defeat plays out in their behaviors. The
school is in a constant state of unrest and anger-fights breaking out, kids acting
out to disrupt class, and the school lives under a veil of surveillance and punishment. A climate of pressured, high-stakes testing
is exactly the opposite of what our kids need.
And it’s not just the tests, it’s also the test prep. We
have not one, but two online test
prep programs our school is mandated to use weekly. 45 mins per week, per subject, plus an assessment in one program and completion of 2-3 “lessons”
in another used directly for math. These
expensive programs are basically test prep questions presented in a video game
format. Get the “right” answer and earn
coins to play games. In some classes,
these programs take up as much as 40% of instructional time each week. Even our little kindergartners are forced to
get on iPads and practice taking tests.
Our Early Childhood teachers know this is wrong. In fact, all our teachers know this is
wrong. But the answer to every question
we ask is…”because this is what they need to know for PARCC (the Common Core
aligned test.)”
And I haven’t even gotten into the numerous and constant
technical problems with these programs. “My
iPad doesn’t work.” “I can’t remember my password.” “I’m new to the school and don’t have a
password.” “I can’t get on the internet.”
“The program keeps logging me out.” “My iPad is all in Japanese.” We waste
probably 20-30 minutes per use just on technical difficulties. While I love the use of authentic, meaningful
technology in the classroom, I hate, I
HATE edtech. But Silicon Valley is no
doubt making a bundle on the backs of my students.
And what’s worse, I am a special education teacher, so my
students are the most fragile of all. And these tests are killing any possibility to
motivate my kids. There are only so many
times I can repeat the mantra that “These don’t matter, guys!” “Just do your best!” These tests are breaking the trust
between me and my students. It
feels so unethical to day after day administer tests that are so far beyond
their current abilities. It’s like we’re
giving these kids tests in Chinese, just to prove they don’t know any
Chinese. And they leave feeling just…dumb…because
they couldn’t answer any of the questions.
I don’t even need the data these tests generate-they are so inappropriately hard,
they tell me nothing of use. Besides, I
have a whole Individual Education Plan that tells me exactly what my kids need
to work on.
But still, every single week, here I am giving yet another
absolutely disgusting test. My kids bang
their heads on desks, they cry, they whine, they give up and say “I’m done” in
front of a blank answer sheet. They fidget,
they act out, they get in trouble just to get out of going to yet another class
where they feel stupid.
I feel dirty when I come home. I wonder, “Should I start to boycott
administering these tests?” But I don’t
have tenure. Everyone tells me to lay
low, to take the bold moves in three years when I've earned tenure.
Three years…how can I do this evil to children for three
more years?
My school was already destabilized as a receiving school
after Mayor Emanuel’s vicious school closings-undergoing massive changes in enrollment and staffing last year.
The neighborhood around us suffers from disinvestment, foreclosure, unemployment,
crime, and poverty deeply impacting our students’ readiness to learn. And instead of wrapping our kids in love and
successes, we batter them with cruel, impossible tests.
I think about how all this bogus data is going to be used to
“prove” our school is failing. Testing
is so wildly out of control in my school because we are “on probation”-like so
many other schools in low-income, African-American communities-and somehow this
justifies these disgusting interventions.
We have a phenomenal staff and school leadership, but instead of being
allowed to create a beautiful place of learning, we are forced to do wrong by
these kids. We are the hammer driving
the nail into the coffin of this little school.
We are giving them the very information they may someday use to destroy
us.
Anyone who says high-stakes testing and the Common Core don’t
matter, you are wrong. These policies are
destroying my school. They are
destroying my profession. They are
destroying the bond between teacher and student. The testing madness needs to stop. Now.
Wednesday, September 3, 2014
Why Teach For America’s Push for “Diversity” Should Not Be Celebrated
Yesterday, I was disappointed to see Teaching Tolerance-a
social justice education resource which I have personally used many times-publish a blog post entitled Teach For (a Diverse)
America. It was difficult to see a TFA alum spout this harmful organization's current PR talking points on a site I trust and love. So, I’d like to take a few moments to debunk TFA’s
deceptive diversity strategy.
But first and foremost,
I want to say that getting more teachers of color into our classrooms and keeping them there is of the utmost
importance.

Here are a few ways TFA actually hurts teachers and students
of color:
1) TFA has a direct
tie to the overall reduction in teachers
of color in schools. The black middle class is shrinking, and TFA’s
anti-union stance and its attacks on the teaching profession are inextricably
linked. Current education policies-which
TFA aggressively promotes-are forcing far more black educators OUT of the
classroom than TFA could ever put back in.
Many black educators cite the worsening working conditions, the
loss of job protections which disproportionately affect African American
teachers, and the effects of neoliberal edreform policies around school
closings, turnarounds, and charter proliferation as reasons why many are
leaving/being forced to leave the profession. TFA
spouts the virtues of teachers of color out of one side of their
mouth while they spit on veteran black educators out of the other. This loss of black educators was perhaps most dramatically seen in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina when TFA helped illegally displaced thousands of veteran black educators-most from the communities where they
teach.
2) TFA is NOT
actually more diverse when compared to the urban districts and urban schools
where most of their recruits are placed.
TFA disingenuously uses national statistics
when they brag about their diversity saying “Our public school teachers are 84 percent white, 7 percent
black and 6 percent Hispanic. Four percent identify with other ethnicities…. half of new TFA teachers identify as
people of color”. But in places like Chicago,
only 47% of teachers identify as white with 28% of teachers being African
American and 17.9% Latino. In fact, in many of the privately-run charter schools which are heavily staffed by TFA and TFA alums, their staff is far LESS diverse than nearby neighborhood public schools.
3) Another point is
that TFA does NOT do a good job of creating “teachers,” regardless of color. From its recruitment process on, TFA’s focus
in unabashedly not about creating career teachers. They are not a teacher pipeline, they create “leaders”-luring
recruits in with promises of direct paths to law school, grad school, firms like Goldman Sachs, or lucrative educational leadership/technology gigs. Less that 20% of their members end up staying
in a classroom more than 4 years. TFA is simply not revolutionizing the teaching force.
4) TFA exacerbates
inequalities for students of color. TFA
novices begin their meager two years with less than 20 hours of practice in
front of children, even for students with special needs. Regardless of the
racial/socio-economic background of their novices, TFA is offering our neediest
kids uncertified, underprepared, short-term novices in lieu of professional
educators.
5) To many TFA corps members of color, the organization has
NOT been a safe space. TFA has been aggressively
recruiting more people of color without changing their elitist, white, middle-class normative culture. In fact, many
CMs of color describe feeling used by TFA to the benefit of the white and wealthy. Here are some rich and fascinating
counterstories of TFA corps members of color: A Racio-economic Analysis of Teach for America:
Counterstories of TFA Teachers of Color
6) If getting more
teachers of color into the classroom is a priority (which it should be) why is
no one doing anything about the rising costs of tuition, the struggle for many
teachers to support themselves during a semester to (in some cases) a full year
of unpaid student teaching, and the increasingly exclusionary teacher basic skills
tests? For starters, how about instead
of giving TFAers those $10,000+ Americorps grants (including the large number
of corps members who are NOT people of color or from low-income backgrounds), let’s
save those public tax dollars for teachers of color who want to be career teachers. In countries where education is valued,
teacher education is completely free. And
let’s not forget that the TFA/edreform push for “higher standards” in teaching
through “more rigorous” entrance exams has resulted in a
dramatic drop in the numbers of African Americans and Latinos entering teacher
prep programs. Of those who do get
in, the costs of a college degree today--especially one that leads to a career
where most will likely never make enough to easily pay back loans—are becoming prohibitively
high.
Unfortunately, the author of this blog makes it seem like the shrinking number of teachers of color is the fault of Schools of Education. Make no mistake, teacher education is under attack just like K-12 education. Neoliberal education reform is intentionally making it less desirable to become a fully-certified teacher. And as so many other neoliberal reforms, the greatest negative impact falls on people of color and people from low-income backgrounds. Pushing more and more people into fast-track alternative certification programs like TFA is intentional and damaging. A low-skilled, short-term teaching force may be in the best interests of corporations and the elite, but it does not benefit children.
Unfortunately, the author of this blog makes it seem like the shrinking number of teachers of color is the fault of Schools of Education. Make no mistake, teacher education is under attack just like K-12 education. Neoliberal education reform is intentionally making it less desirable to become a fully-certified teacher. And as so many other neoliberal reforms, the greatest negative impact falls on people of color and people from low-income backgrounds. Pushing more and more people into fast-track alternative certification programs like TFA is intentional and damaging. A low-skilled, short-term teaching force may be in the best interests of corporations and the elite, but it does not benefit children.
7) TFA practices disaster capitalism which is devastating
communities of color. Teach For America is
supported and funded by the very forces which caused the financial crisis throwing many families of color into foreclosure, bankruptcy, even homelessness, which refuse
to pay workers fair wages thereby growing poverty, and are increasing inequality today. When your largest funders are companies like Walmart,
Bank of America, and Goldman Sachs, you do not get to pretend to speak for
the oppressed and disenfranchised.
Ultimately, TFA’s focus on diversity is an attempt to cloak
the very real damage this organization does, especially to students, communities, and teachers of color.
On a personal note, I recently returned to the Chicago Public Schools and now teach in a school on Chicago's southside where over 90% of the teachers are African American women. These veteran black educators have gone through the chaos of school closings, many grew up in and still live in the community offering a wealth of knowlege, and are some of the most amazing teachers I have ever met. We also have one TFA teacher. While a lovely young lady and a person of color, she comes from out of state, is new to Chicago, is not trained for the special education position she was placed in, and is there because the last TFAer left after his two years were up. This is not a solution.
I will end on this. There ARE organizations out there doing
the work of attracting and supporting more people of color through full teacher
preparation programs. In Illinois, Grow Your Own, is doing amazing work recruiting people from the communities where they hope to someday teach. And they do so without learning to teach on
other people’s children. GYO helps members pass the Test of Academic Proficiency and helps provide funding to complete a quality teacher prep program offering tutoring as needed. A GYO graduate completes
their teacher preparation before ever
stepping foot in a classroom. And they
are there for the long term. Every tax dollar, Americorps grant, and media
story should go to programs like this.
And Teach For America, regardless of their latest diversity PR spin, needs to be gone. Let's start by taking it off the Teaching Tolerance website.
Friday, August 29, 2014
Parents of Chicago: Questions You Must Ask About Your Child’s School This Year
1) How many teachers/staff left the year before
and why?
Schools all over Chicago are in chaos. Intentional chaos. The year after the largest number of school
closings in the history of the United States followed by massive budget cuts to many schools left a wake of destruction and
pain. Get the information from teachers
and staff at your child’s school about how many teachers left and what’s going
on that so many are getting out. Ask about
the school climate, how teachers, staff, and students were treated last year. Ask
if teachers are miserable at this school.
Ask why they are miserable. Many
teachers are probably afraid to say anything, but if you ask them about it
directly, they might open up.
2) Are there
positions left unfilled and why?
It is possible your child will begin the school year with
long term subs. Be angry about this,
especially if the position was filled the year before. That teacher was likely run off by the chaos.
3) What is the situation with substitutes?
Speaking of substitutes, CPS has manufactured a severe
shortage of day-to-day subs. Many
schools simply have no one to cover classes when teachers are out sick. Your child may ILLEGALLY be taught by a classroom
aide, specialist teachers like the art/music/gym teacher, or special education
teachers pulled from their students with special needs.
4) Is your child’s teacher on a “provisional
certification”?
CPS has many teacher positions filled with Teach For America
or Chicago Teaching Fellows novices who do
not have certification or experience working in schools. Ask about your child’s teacher's certification, being
specific about whether they are on an “initial” (new, fully-licensed teachers),
“standard” (teachers with more than four years working in schools), or “provisional”
(little to no training in teaching whatsoever.
And thanks to TFA lobbying efforts in Washington, parents are not even
informed when their child’s teacher has not completed a training program).
These untrained staff are often placed in special education
positions despite having no expertise working with students with disabilities. It is a gross injustice to allow these people
to be placed in a classroom, but CPS is increasing the numbers to save on
personnel costs. Make a fuss about the
administrator hiring people from these alternative certification programs.
5) What kind of discipline is happening at the
school?
CPS is implementing a new discipline policy with very little
support, planning, or alternatives. CPS
has completely outlawed suspensions in early grades and put quotas on how many
days a child can be suspended for. While
it is commendable that CPS wants to cut down on suspensions and move toward
more restorative practices, it is apparent that they have not given schools the
types of resources to truly improve behavior.
Many schools are turning to oppressive discipline strategies that treat
students like inmates in prison to quiet the chaos. Ask lots of questions about if classrooms are
safe spaces and what is being done to meet ALL children’s needs.
6) How much of a
focus are standardized test scores?
If you walk into your child’s school and see a wall of data
from testing or if schools give out awards to teachers based on this testing,
be concerned. A school which is overly
focused on test scores often warps its curriculum to up these numbers…at any
cost. If your child complains about
boredom, behavior problems of peers, or seems to be losing a love of learning,
a test-focused school culture is often part of the problem. And know, this push for better test scores
often comes from higher-ups, not the school staff or administration. Partner with them about how to resist the
testing mania. Often parents have a
greater ability to push back than teachers.
The anti-excessive testing groups More Than A Score and FairTest have some great
resources.
7) The last, and most
important question is “What can I do?”
Fight back. Parents,
we teachers need you. We are being pummeled out there in the
schools. We will never be the kinds of
amazing educators your child deserves if these purposeful policy attacks
continue. And know that this is
happening all over CPS-including the
charters. There are no good choices
out there as long as this system continues unchecked.
We need you to stand up for us, scream about the injustices
we all see as loudly as possible. Do not
let CPS continue to get away with these injustices. If the sick and twisted truth were out in
broad daylight for all to see they could not do these things!
Find out the whole truth. And then shout it out to
winds. Let’s force something better.
![]() |
Members of BAM gather at the Neighborhood Schools Picnic in May 2014. (Crystal Stella Becerril) From http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/17053/bad_ass_moms_defend_chicago_public_schools |
Resources:
BAM (Badass Moms) /Neighborhood Schools Fair
Raise Your
Hand
Community
Groups ie KOCO, Albany Park Association, Brighton Park Association, Pilsen Alliance, etc
More you
can do:
Go to CPS board meeting and speak up
Get involved
in your school's LSC.
Tell your child's teacher you are on their side.
And...Help
Karen Lewis get elected for mayor so we can FIX these problems!
Tuesday, January 7, 2014
Chicago’s Arctic Freeze Brings Up the Question: What is the Purpose of Schools?
An interesting discussion broke out over the recent announcement by the Chicago Public Schools to keep schools open despite a dangerous extreme cold snap hitting the city, a
decision which they later reversed thanks in part to pressure from the Chicago
Teachers Union.
On social media, many worried that closing schools would be
detrimental to the neediest families.
Many claimed, rightfully-so, that school was often the only place where
kids could get a hot meal and a warm, safe environment.
And this controversy really hit home for me how much we have
come to view schools as the only comprehensive form of poverty alleviation in our society. This argument regarding schools has become so
second-nature to many, that we never stop and think about what this really
means.
Here is what I wrote on my facebook page regarding the
decision:
Everyone is in an uproar about kids not having a place to be warm, safe, and to get meals, if schools are closed tomorrow. Where is the outrage that these same needy kids don't have those basic services all the other times that school is not in session? We should be filling the streets in protest knowing that any child ever goes hungry or cold in this city, but instead we've been conditioned to conflate this issue with schools. They are not the same thing!
If we as a society truly want schools to be where we combat
poverty, then we must take that task seriously. That means funding schools to be places of
social services. And I don’t mean
leaving that job up to already over-worked administrators and teachers to
write grants or solicit online donations, or for parents and community groups to hold fund-raisers always scrounging
and begging. Schools are public spaces
and I have no problem with that space serving multiple functions such as becoming health
clinics, food depositories, warming/cooling centers, community centers, and providing mental health supports,. (Heck, all those "underutilzed" schools would be a great place to implement these programs. Whoops, already closed most of them down...) But all of these
programs require serious money and staff to operate.
Now, even if we did implement all the wraparound services
mentioned above, that is merely addressing the symptoms, not the cause. The only way to truly make a dent in poverty
is to end the growing inequality in this country. Tax the wealthy, demand a higher minimum wage,
rein in Wall St, invest in public services including affordable housing, free
and universal health care, and true equitable funding in education. Can we really not, at the very minimum, protect children from the traumas of poverty?
Since we seem unable to even conceive of these changes, then we must fund schools to be the band-aids they are constantly asked to be. Give the neediest schools the most
money. And then do not complain about
the costs of education. Other countries
provide for their citizens through social services. Finland’s schools aren't expected to be
anything other than a school.
Let our schools be schools.
Principals and teachers in low-income schools should not have to be
responsible for all the needs of the kids and their families. Many schools and individuals take on this
task because they know that not having access to these basic services makes
their job of educating children near impossible. But frankly, educators are not trained to be
doctors or social workers or charity workers.
And they shouldn't have to be.
It amazes me how normalized poverty is in our country. We cannot imagine a world which actually
takes care of our kids. The idea that
closing down schools in a weather emergency would put kids in danger should be
an eye-opener. The fact that no one
blinked an eyelash when private schools and suburban districts across the
affected states all immediately decided to close schools, but were outraged
that people wanted CPS to have the same consideration for student and staff safety. Everybody knows the difference between those
schools. Poverty, it always comes down
to poverty.
Schools cannot pick up all the burdens of our cruel, racist,
unequal country. And we need to stop
expecting them to.
Sunday, July 7, 2013
Speech for 7/4 Rally: The Fight Against Austerity
Below is the copy of a speech I gave during a rally against Austerity outside Mayor Emanuel's home. Here are a couple links to news coverage of the event here, here, and here.
Hello! Happy Independence Day!My name is Katie Osgood and I am a teacher. I teach at a psychiatric hospital here in the city, working with students from all over the Chicagoland area and of all ages including hundreds of CPS students. And in my hospital, I have seen directly the impact of Rahm Emanuel’s terrible school policies. We are seeing higher rates of depression, suicide attempts, school refusal, family conflict, anxiety, and aggressive behaviors all directly related to current school policies in this city.To put it bluntly, CPS’s policies are hurting children. When you viciously close schools, slash budgets-including taking money for social workers, smaller classes, arts, music, and gym, when you fire trusted teachers and staff, all these things hurt kids. And in the middle of all this, our mayor has the gall to cut mental health services and close mental health facilities. But you see, the chaos of our system is intentional. The people in charge call it “creative disruption,” a business term. They want to let market forces determine where schools will stand, and maybe make a buck or two in the process (ahem UNO charter schools) -which means throw up a charter here, close down another school there, and they even generously say they will close the underperforming charters too. Gee, thanks.They treat schools like shoe stores in a strip mall-not historic institutions that are grounding communities. I have met countless children who are lost in this madness, going to 3, 4, even 5 different schools in as many years. Here is the pattern I keep seeing: Students start in a neighborhood school, the school is closed or the parents are lured to a charter, the charter very quickly pushes out that student due to behavior problems or disabilities-I am hearing frightening horror stories coming from these charters-and they bounce back to another neighborhood school which may be closed itself. Kids learn to hate school, to fear it. Under this system, children become liabilities, bad assets to be dumped with they are not deemed profitable. You know what, kids know when they are not wanted. And it is heartbreaking to watch kids get beaten by school reform.This is madness. Children need stability, they need connection, they need strong ties to their neighborhoods and communities. They need schools that are funded to work and be successful. They need fully certified, experienced teachers! (Have you heard how our CPS school board just expanded the contract with Teach for America tripling its funds in the middle of a “budget crisis”? Teach for America is a program which gives non-education majors a short, five week crash course in teaching and then places them in our highest needs classrooms. After firing hundreds of experienced teachers and staff, our Board is bringing in MORE uncertified, untrained novices. Parents, DEMAND that your child’s teacher is certified and qualified. You have that right!)
And these policies are most damaging to our students with special needs who are the most deeply impacted by the bad policy coming from the 125 Clark and our 1% Mayor. Mayor Emanuel is deliberately enforcing policies that hurt children. Do you know what we call people who deliberately hurt kids? (---- )
I have seen my CPS students and colleagues in the schools become weary and be beaten down with exhaustion and demoralization. The longest school day coupled with the longest school closings process ever, was impossibly tiring. Hearing after hearing, bad news on the heels of bad news. Crazy budget cuts on top of everything else. Rahm and the other bullies at CPS want this. They want to wear us out, beat us down, keep us too tired to speak up.But will they succeed? NO! Because what they will never understand is that we are fighting for flesh and blood children, children that WE know by name. They are OUR precious sons and daughters, OUR students, who fill up OUR schools in OUR communities. (Who’s schools? OUR schools! Who’s children? OUR children!)
I wish we could say that this was just Rahm and his twisted mind. But it’s not, this is part of a greater attack on teachers, on schools, on low-income communities of color, on public education. It’s happening all over the country, the world. But let me say this, Rahm may not have started all this, and it may not be just him leading these attacks, but you know what? I think he’s a good place to start the offensive! Take back our city! Take back our schools! Let’s make Rahm be a One Term Mayor! (One Term Mayor One Term Mayor One Term Mayor!)Today is Independence Day. So we declare independence from a mayor-appointed school board made up of millionaires and business elites. We need an elected, representative and who represents US! We declare independence from a regime of high-stakes testing that takes away joy and creativity from our classrooms. We declare independence from a city budgeting system that gives money to private school stadiums to politically connected charter operators but starves our public schools. We declare independence from a 1% Mayor who cares more about the interests of the rich than Chicago’s students. (When public education is under attack, what do you do? STAND UP, FIGHT BACK!)So thank you, and Happy Independence Day.
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