Michelle Failed Teacher
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Strand was denied the yearlong leave of absence she requested to help guide federal STEM education efforts. In refusing to guarantee that Strand could return to the school district afterward, her superintendent in West Fargo cited, somewhat ironically, the teacher shortage.
Long before the pandemic coincided with historically low unemployment in other fields, a dwindling pipeline of new teachers and the early exit of experienced ones raised alarms. A recent Gallup poll found that K-12 workers are more burned out than those in any other field, while a Rand survey said that teachers and principals are twice as stressed as the average American worker.
It then requires our educational and political leaders to lead. They have the ability to provide high-quality mental health help for students and teachers in and out of schools; regulate guns; restore the child tax credit; and offer free school lunches. They can repeal overburdening and micromanaging mandates and educational gag orders. They can make it less costly and difficult to become meaningfully credentialed. They can increase teacher pay to levels that enable schools to retain and sustain their best.
There is a great teacher shortage because of a great shortage of respect to teachers in America. The teachers are underpaid and overworked (long hours and no overtime for homework correction and weekend/holidays planning) together with lack of ongoing support from Politicians who know a little bit or nothing about quality education, School Districts and/or School Leaders all in all. The problem cannot be solved because of lack of both passion and compassion towards the children and the future generation who will get the task to improve or worsen our quick changing society down the road.
In 2005, Kathleen Sullivan failed the California bar exam when she was trying for a position for Quinn Emanual in Los Angeles. After 10 years of hard work, she eventually became a name partner for Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan and even became the dean of the Stanford Law School.
Another influential California Governor, Brown failed the California bar exam on his first attempt. Despite this failure, he went on to have an influential career as a public servant, serving as the 34th and 39th Governor of California, the California Attorney General, and the mayor of Oakland.
Despite graduating from Harvard Law School, Governor Patrick failed the bar exam twice before passing on his third attempt. Later, he served as Governor of Massachusetts for 8 years as the first African-American governor in the state. He is now the managing director at Bain Capital.
Governor Paterson also failed the bar exam, yet still became a prominent public servant. He is well known as the first African-American to serve as Governor of New York, and the second legally-blind man to serve as a governor in the U.S.
Harold Ford Jr. failed the Tennessee bar exam during his campaign for the U.S. House of Representatives. Afterwards, he served as a Representative for 10 years and became an author, as well as a financial managing director for Morgan Stanley.
Like many who have failed the bar, Pat Robinson felt feelings of humiliation and despair after failing the New York bar, despite graduating from Yale Law School near the top of his class. However, he later became a born-again Christian and made a name for himself as a minister and televangelist.
While not nearly as famous as the others on this list, Kevin Callahan does offer a great example of perseverance in the face of failure. He failed the bar not once, not twice, but 10 times! He finally passed the Massachusetts bar exam on his 11th attempt and runs his own private practice.
Paulina Bandy has gained some notoriety in the legal world as being the person who perhaps has failed the bar exam more than anyone else. She failed the California bar exam 13 times before passing. She now runs a website dedicated to helping people pass the bar.
My mind was blown. Did I fail Devonte? Did I fail my community? I remember walking Devonte home, entering a home that was dark, filled with smoke, and bustling with six children, none of whom were in school. I expressed my frustration to his parents and offered a few solutions to support Devonte. Needless to say, I failed to fully accept and understand the depth of his struggle.
Eric: You reflect in your book about the gulf between you and Patrick, including the gulf in privilege. But you were also both technically members of minority groups. Did you view yourself as a teacher of color in the Delta?
In her second and third years of teaching, Rhee team taught a combined class of the same students with another teacher.[10] She told The New York Times that those students had national standardized test scores that were initially at the 13th percentile but at the end of two years, the class was at grade level, with some students performing at the 90th percentile.[8] Earlier she had said on her résumé that 90 percent of her students had attained scores at the 90th percentile.[11] In math, her scores went from 22 percentile to 52 percentile, an average increase of 15 percentile annually.[12] In reading, her scores went from 14 percentile to 48 percentile, an average increase of 17 percentile annually.[12] Rhee responded that the discrepancies between the official test scores and the ones listed on her résumé could be explained by the fact that her principal at the time informed her of the gains but those results may not have been the official state tests that were preserved.[11]
In 1997, Rhee founded and began serving as the CEO of The New Teacher Project, a nonprofit that within ten years of its founding, trained and supplied urban school districts with 23,000 mid-career professionals wanting to become classroom teachers.[8] The project primarily serves New York, Chicago, Miami, and Philadelphia.[8] Beginning in 2000, the project began redesigning the D.C. schools' recruitment and hiring processes.[4]
Rhee inherited a troubled system; there had been six school chiefs in the previous 10 years,[6] students historically had below-average scores on standardized tests,[15] and according to Rhee, only 8 percent of eighth graders were performing at grade level in mathematics.[16] The D.C. schools were performing poorly despite having the advantage of the third highest spending per student in the U.S.[17] Fenty and Rhee announced that they planned to make revolutionary changes in D.C. schools, and that part of the planned changes was a hoped-for "grand bargain" with teachers under which "greater accountability, including an end to tenure," would be traded "for a nearly 100-percent increase in salaries."[18]
In 2008 she also tried to renegotiate teacher compensation, offering teachers the choice of salaries of up to $140,000 based on what she termed "student achievement" with no tenure rights or earning much smaller pay raises with tenure rights retained. Teachers and the teachers union rejected the proposal, contesting that some form of tenure was necessary to protect against arbitrary, political, or wrongful termination of employment.[19]
In 2010 Rhee and the unions agreed on a new contract that offered 20 percent pay raises and bonuses of $20,000 to $30,000 for "strong student achievement," in exchange for weakened teachers' seniority protections and the end of teacher tenure for one year. Under this new agreement, Rhee fired 241 teachers, the vast majority of whom received poor evaluations, and put 737 additional school employees on notice.[20]
Rhee's style of reform created a great deal of controversy. One common criticism disputes her assertion that, while a teacher, she dramatically increased students' average scores from the 13th percentile to the 90th. It was a statement that could not be verified during her confirmation process for D.C. Schools Chancellor.[21]
Referring to the 266 teachers she laid off, Rhee told a national business magazine: "I got rid of teachers who had hit children, who had had sex with children, who had missed 78 days of school. Why wouldn't we take those things into consideration?" George Parker, president of the teachers union, called Rhee's statements "reckless," said they had no factual basis, and demanded that Rhee apologize to the 266 teachers for making these remarks.[31] Rhee declined to apologize for her statement, claimed that one of the 266 dismissed employees had been accused of sexual misconduct, six had been suspended for using corporal punishment, and two had been absent without leave, while many others also had egregious time and attendance records.[32]
In The Gift of Failure, author and teacher Jessica Lahey details the consequences of this approach. She says challenging experiences are the only way we develop certain coping and problem-solving skills. If we shield children from adversity, key brain connections cannot develop.
This is how Rhee introduced herself to teachers in Washington, D.C., in 2007. Rhee had spent a few years teaching in a rough Baltimore neighborhood and a decade in education reform, but was a "virtual unknown," when Mayor Adrian Fenty picked her to run the D.C. schools. Her style was direct and her objectives clear - make Washington's school's better, even if it meant changing laws, firing people, closing schools and making adults unhappy.
Indeed, after some initial excitement, many adults were unhappy. Scenes show parents angry about school closures, district leaders angry that she defied their instructions, teachers angry about layoffs and firings. Teachers interviewed for the film said Rhee didn't consider that some kids live in extreme poverty or have fallen so far behind that they'd need more than one year to catch up.
RG3, as fans call him, is a rookie who has been playing in the National Football League for all of 18 weeks, but led the Washington Redskins to twice as many victories as they had last year, their first winning season since 2007 and their first divisional championship in 13 years. Now imagine if the Redskins had a little less money to pay salaries next year and cut Griffin from the team, keeping instead a handful of bench-warmers. It sounds ridiculous, but that practice is exactly what happens in most school districts where policies require teachers to be laid off based on seniority, not talent. 2b1af7f3a8