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| An Educator's Woes | | Print | |
| Written by Lenore Poe | ||||||||
| Monday, 01 February 2010 10:00 | ||||||||
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Beginning with the decreased standards, one must only look at changes in graduation requirements over the past 10 years. In Florida’s Pasco County School District, 8th grade middle-school students who have failed any of their core classes, or their Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test for any of the classes, are placed into what is called the “Promotion Recovery Program.” This program consists of 11 days of subject-related worksheets for the students to complete. Upon completion, the student is given the go-ahead to graduate into high school. This program not only undermines the effort put forth by the teacher and the other students that worked for an entire year on the course material, but sends ill-prepared students to the next grade level, making them some other teacher’s problem. Trackback(0)
Comments (5)
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SgtMom
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... These are the parents who pioneered the concept of giving losing sports team members a trophy "just for showing up". I refused to pay the $6.00 for my son's soccer trophy. His team lost every single game. I thought it was wrong to award them a trophy "just for showing up". Most of the kids sulked and complained through the games while the poorer player's moms bullied the coach to play their son more. During the 'awards ceremony' after losing their final game, my son's soccer coaches presented him with an trophy. They said they were very disheartened as coaches, but every week my son was pumped up and enthusiastic the team would win one that week. They paid for his trophy out of their own pocket. I never went along with the 'trophy for showing up' deal. He earned only a few, but that $6.00 "just for showing up" trophy was the one I was most proud of. |
Robert Keteyian
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compentencies Measuring learning is something good teachers do all the time. High stakes tests don't do a very good job of measuring the quality of learning/teaching. Your reference to teaching communication skills greatly interests me. We teach writing, oral presentation skills and communication through the arts. However, we do not teach interpersonal communication skills. This is never addressed in standardized testing, but it is a critical skill to function in our society. |
Susan
said:
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Oh, my... Your article gave me goosebumps because we are experiencing just what you discuss now in my school...actually for the past few years. This is my last year. I can't take any more of the changes that go nowhere but down. I am an excellent teacher, but my skills are not appreciated any more. What saddens me is that you are nowhere near your 50's and are already so discouraged. What will become of our students? My grandchildren? Yours? |
A.P.
said:
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Thank you Thank you for describing in detail the dilemma so many teachers face. It will hopefully be useful for those considering their career choices. Teaching is not revered in our society for many reasons, too numerous to list, but the fact remains. If you hope to be respected for a job well done, perhaps teaching isn't the career choice for you. In this profession, "No good deed goes unpunished." Yet people continue to complete teaching credential requirements. Perhaps your writing should be required reading for credential candidates. |





After just three years as a Florida educator, I have grown jaded by all facets of education. Between the lack of administrative or parental support, and the continually lowered standards set by school districts, teachers have become more powerless and less influential in the classroom. What’s worse is that I am one of many teachers who feel this way!

