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Over the past few weeks I have talked to about 1000 teachers. I currently have a seasonal job (though it looks like I might get hired on full time - hopefully in a programmer capacity though) doing customer support for teachers.
School computer admins restrict the teachers (ie, they remove admin rights from their computers - which causes a lot of head aches for the teachers), the district buys packages and then dumps them on teachers - often without getting them any training. Even when the programs are really good and can make the lives of teachers much easier in the long run they don't seek the input of teachers before hand.
One school got rid of all the regular books and went with e-books that are flash based - and bought I-Pads. They bought the whole ebooks package without even thinking about asking what was needed to run them and if they were compatible.
I get calls from teachers totally confused about their states' adoption programs (curriculum adoptions) and how it correlates to their class. The school did not purchase all the needed programs, and in some cases totally forgot they had to renew licenses for their products this year and the teachers are in class calling me with no way to teach their students.
While on an (evil to be sure) smoke break today with a fellow worker I noted that my Grandma taught school back in the 30's and 40's. Kids come to school and have their books there, the teacher was in control, and that was that. They wrote the tests, they decided who passed and failed, and the buck stopped there.
Now teachers are beholden to the big money - from book sales to online books. They have district reps who decide what to purchase (and then drop off the face of the earth), sales reps to deal with (your district is small? Sorry, I will get back to you later - another district makes me a lot more money and gets my attention), testing and making sure they can meet their state and federal standards (so that the district can get more money). Kids are a dollar sign now - not someone to be taught.
The investment is not now for the kids, they are a vehicle for more money. The teachers I meet still want to teach and use technology to better help all their kids - but now they have no choice in what is best for the kids. The teachers are just a vehicle as well to more money for the district. The more you bring in the more you make. Our kids have become a financial investment for the short term gains and a commodity like many other 'futures'.
They are trying, but from the techs to the administrators teachers are getting more and more removed from how they teach kids and what tools they have. No one is willing to trust them - and I actually told a teacher today "they trust you with their kids but not with admin rights to your own computer, it just seems wrong". It is like folks are tying the hands of someone and then acting all surprised when those people cannot do the job they were hired to do.
I won't blame teachers, because I don't see them as the ones anymore making decisions. You want to fire people for under performing schools? Fire the decision makers - not the workers. If test scores are not met, start at the top - because that is where all the decisions are made. Want to blame a company for failing? Don't blame the workers who do as they are told, blame the people who make the decisions.
Problems don't start with the people closest to the actual work, they start way above that pay grade - and yet time and again we see those making the bad decisions awarded the most money and the people doing the actual work, doing as they were told, being punished.
It is high time we held the people responsible for failure responsible - and not the people doing the grunt work for them.
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