Halvie said:
Not sure about other cities around the country, but after graduating I saw several openings that would pay teachers a premium for working in "rougher" neighborhoods. Hopefully that prevents those schools from being filled with nothing but crap teachers..?
I wish I could raise your text to a Font size of 100 so everyone could read your post.
... It's the cycle of education in American for an "Under-preforming School" (I work in one now). Here's how it works:
1. School is scoring low on state tests
2. School is labeled "Title I" (or whatever they call it in your state)
3. School is now micro-managed to hell.
4. There are meetings ALL THE TIME, before school, after school, during school
5. There is a TON of work to be done by the teachers on their own time
6. There is a TON of pressure on teachers to raise scores, have lower referrals, have high attendance rates.
7. Teachers become very frustrated with workload, expectations, micromanagement
8. Veteran teachers quit, retire, or transfer to another school... New teachers quit.
9. NEW Teachers are hired because nobody wants to work in this school environment
10. NEW Teachers have zero experience with classroom management
11. NEW Teachers are destroyed by the students, they are unable to teach actual content in their classes because of the constant behavior disruptions
Return to 1. and repeat indefinitely
Your school is constantly staffed with teachers who I wouldn't even call "terrible" or "bad teachers"... they are just not equipped. They have the potential to be good teachers because they know their content and they are passionate about helping students. But they never get more than 3 years of experience under their belt because the cannot survive the environment.
It's fucking rough out there guys. And these are the types of schools most minority children attend. They're just poorly staffed and it's NOT the teacher's fault. Guys, I promise you: a teacher has no incentive to be bad at their job. The job SUCKS when the kids are being disruptive and not learning.
Again, volunteer to go into a middle school and see how it is sometimes.