Nancie Atwell, winner of the Varkey Foundation's
first Global Teacher Prize, recently spoke to CNN's
"New Day" show about receiving a $1 million award that
she subsequently handed over to her school, the school she founded, the Center For Teaching and Learning.
I admire Ms. Atwell and all her work. I am sure she is
a great teacher, but I have a problem with any
teacher, even me, being called the best Global Teacher and winning an award of
$1,000,000.
Although she humbly noted that she thought that the
gift and award to her was symbolic of the Varkey Foundation’s acknowledgment of
all teachers, only one was singled out. I know many “world's greatest teachers”
of English, Social Studies, Science, Math, World Languages, Art, Music, and
Physical Education. No single teacher should get any award like that. It is
simply an unfair contest. But that’s what we do in
our society -- we make everything a competition.
One of the three CNN co-anchors asked her to describe
what she does that is so special. I listened to her then looked up what she described. It's
all very Impressive. Then I realized that these are all things I have seen many
English teachers do every day when they are in an environment that allows them
to really teach.
Then, as curious as a kindergartener, I went to the
CTL website and discovered how different this Independent (Is that code for
private?) school is from public schools.
At CTL, there are small class sizes with
16-18 students, (with just 8-9 in kindergarten), a full-day kindergarten program focused on helping children feel
secure and competent as they learn the essentials of writing, reading, and math
and bond with a teacher and classmates,
and never a standardized test.
Also at CTL, there is a library in every room, tens of
thousands of books for students to choose from, time to read them every day,
individualized instruction that results in both high proficiency and a passion
for books and reading; a five-year spiral curriculum in science and history in
which all students, grades K-8 engage together as researchers of paired
concepts; a science lab and hands-on learning in science, and history
with field trips, guest experts, experiments, project-based research,
collaborations with regional environmental agencies and institutions,
participation in the Maine Model United Nations Program, and explorations in
the arts.
Each student also has access to daily writing
workshops in which they develop his or her own topics, write in many genres,
confer with their teachers about drafts in progress, communicate their ideas to
others, and achieve recognition for writing excellence; an exemplary art
program, weekly music classes in grades K-4, drama in grades 5-8, a school
literary magazine,
daily whole-school morning meetings that create a
community as children and teachers chat about current events and natural
phenomena, celebrate birthdays, sing, read poems, and laugh together, multicultural
studies and celebrations, and daily recess, a well-equipped playground, and
woods with a nature trail.
…Just like every public school we know. Hardly.
The other two top 10 finalists from the U.S. were
Stephen Ritz, from Public School 55 in the South Bronx and Naomi Volain from an
inner city urban high school. Why not them? But I digress….
Back to the TV interview. Then came the bombshell.
Atwell was asked, “What do you say to kids out there
who are trying to figure out what they want to do when they grow up, and might
be considering teaching?”
Her response was, “Honestly, I’d encourage them to
work in the private sector.” When asked why, she told the anchors what she
could of what we know teachers are faced with constrained by CCSS and tests,
turned teachers into technicians, not reflective practitioners. "And if
you are a creative, smart young person, I don't think this is the time to go
into teaching unless an independent school would suit you.” What? Really?
Isn’t working in an independent school like working in
the private sector?
Anyway, let's get back to the real issue here. The
reasons Ms. Atwell felt are reasons for students not to go into public school
teaching are exactly why many public school teachers are leaving the profession
earlier or sooner after starting. If the
question, as asked, was referring to her middle school kids, then is she saying
there will never be a return to creative, smart, young people to public school
teaching? Is all hope gone unless you work in an independent school, as she
does?
But let’s suppose she was really referring to today’s
20-somethings. Are we to give up on public schools and public school teaching?
Are we to lose the oral history of the craft that master teachers hand down to
younger teachers in the schools in which they work? Who then will teach
teachers to teach? TFA? Will how to teach be taught from online or print
sources? Who will be there to pay forward the craft?
I disagree with Ms. Atwell. Now is the time to actively
recruit those “creative, smart, young” people who have what it takes, not only
to become master teachers, but who also have the will to become masters of
their own fate, fight back, defeat the “edupreneurs” making policy, and reclaim
our great profession from those who have stolen it from our children. I bet
both Mr. Ritz and Ms. Volain, and others, would agree.
http://www.amazon.com/Doing-Right-Thing-Teacher-Speaks/dp/1460225481
Who then will teach teachers to teach? TFA? Will how to teach be taught from online or print sources? Don't worry, Pearson will develop the software for that.
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