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And in a positive way.
Many of the complaints I'm hearing from the right involve the language spoken, or the flag flown, or the immigrants 'not being American enough'. At the same time, some of the complaints I've heard about teachers is that they "get three months off work" or 'the NEA is too strong' or some such unsupported idiocy.
We all know the latter isn't true- teachers K-12 often need to find 'summer jobs' (at least, many of the ones I've talked to through the years), or at least, that's been my understanding- and please, correct me if I'm wrong on this particular point; some of those jobs are within the subject they teach otherwise. That aside, we also all know we hear complaints from the right regarding 'speaking our language', 'knowing our culture', etc., and etc.
One question I've always been asking myself is why teaching can't be a year-round paid career at the K-12 level. I know, in many cases, teachers devote a great deal of time to teaching in the 'off months', the summer 'vacation' (I'm thinking my band director here), but I'm really wondering at this point two things:
1) How much time, exactly, do teachers who teach K-12 spend teaching during their students' summer vacations, and
2) Could those teachers taking other jobs during this period be utilized, funded, and certified to teach their subjects as an extended high school curriculum to persons seeking legal immigration?
We all know the immigration process is a long one; why can't we put that time to better use- for both teachers and people seeking to legally join our society?
(I'm going to bed as soon as I post this; I'll bump it in the morning if it needs it. I just think this is a situation that could benefit more than one group if it's handled correctly.)
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