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Teachers are Overstressed and Undervalued

Tonight at 9 PM Eastern, I will be an on-air guest for Huffington Post as we discuss how teachers are overstressed and undervalued.

Tune in live here.

Here is the archived video:

This discussion was inspired by Randy Turner's post A Warning to Young People: Don't become a teacher.

My position on this topic can be summarized by a few key points:

  • Teaching is one of the most important professions we have on this planet, and I love teaching.
  • Would I encourage my children to become a teacher? Yes, but I would make it clear that they have a real challenge ahead of them if they desire to teach the way they aspire to teach.
  • Getting rid of teachers is easy. We treat them so badly they leave. In some jurisdictions 50% of teachers quit before 5 years on the job. The question isn't necessarily how do we get rid of bad teachers -- I'd rather us spend more time asking how to we create great teachers and then how do we convince them to stay.
  • Will the most impressive teachers likely to be attracted or discouraged from teaching by command-control education policies that teacher-proof curricula and assessment?
  • We don't have a shared understanding for what good teaching looks like nor do we have a shared understanding for the purpose of school.
  • Inside the classroom, the teacher is the most important factor on student success; however, the influences of the teacher are dwarfed by the influences of out-of-school factors. Equity begets excellence.
  • Are there bad teachers -- yes. There are bad doctors, lawyers, journalists and education pundits but you don't improve a profession by replacing bachelor and masters degrees with 5 week in services like Teach for America.

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Joe Bower

Joe Bower teaches in Alberta, Canada.