"keep the parents and the school administration happy"ghmerrill wrote: ↑Sun Aug 05, 2018 11:15 amOverall, a fairly accurate comment on much of public education in this country at this point in time. The "keep the parents and the school administration happy" is independent of the subject being taught. My daughter taught middle school math (grades 6-8) for eight years in a variety of schools ranging from impoverished inner city to wealthy national golf community. All the same in fundamental respects. She finally left and got a real life. Her comment was "All I wanted to do was teach math to kids who had problems with it. I wasn't allowed to."
Guess that's a deviation from the thread. So I'll quit.
I can't believe how universal education is. The same thing happened here. One of the reasons I quit as a teacher was the turn on how to look at education.
When I started in the early 80'ies the goal was "to teach children how to play an instrument". To measure this you just listened. Could they play? Highly motivated students got longer lessons. Public music schools started in the 1960-ies that was free of charge. They still were free in the 80-ies. Music were for all children not just those with parents who had good economy. The children with an interest to learn continued until they were 21 years of age. They who did not want to continue quit early.
When I quit in 1999 the goal was "the children should know what instruments exists, their names and how they sound and function. Goal was to have fun in musical activities until they quit. To measure this you count how many students there are in the school every year. You need a certain number on each teacher. The school do not care if they learn, that's secondary. Students got lessons of 16 minutes/week each. In practice 20 minutes if you had one or you had two students for 40 minutes. Highly motivated students were not given extra lessons. High fees had 1999 made it a school for the rich, but still partly financed by taxes which I think is insane because it gives only the children of wealthy parents the opportunity to study music on all tax-payers behalf."
How did I do?
I did better in the beginning when my goal was to teach students an instument. The children who learned to play were the children I started when I was new at work. I still remember them.
I did worse - in that aspect - when the goal was changed to "keep the parents and the school administration happy" since the definition of a good teacher then became the one who has many students. Students were needed because they pay the fee the school needs. If students quit and no que on the instrument you teach, then you will loose your job. This leads to lots of campaigns to get new students and teaching methods to make them study for as long as possible.
To me this in NOT the same type of teaching you need if you want to learn to play an instrument for life. Do you think the management wants to hear your thoughts? Of course they don't want to discuss this. They just want you to fix it. "Be a good teacher" solves everything, aye.
I saw this in the mid 90'ies and started to make a plan how to find an exit as a teacher. I quit in 1999.
Best thing I did was to realise where education was going early and to do the switch before I got to old. Now education of all kinds has similar problems. Private schools have started and every student has a sum (from tax) that follows the student to the school he/she choose. Same thing happens. The owner of the school wants students to their school. No students no money. How to attract students? With fun activities and high degrees. Student do not learn but get higher degrees anyway. School does not care if students learn they are mostly interested in having a school in the first place and this means they have to attract new students. Teachers are no longer authorities and students do not learn!!!
Do you think the management wants to discuss this? Of course not. They just want you to fix it. "Be a good teacher" solves everything, aye.
Politics noticed there was a crisis in the school system. They have tried to fix things for years but they fail. The thing to fix this is either to have all schools be tax financed public schools and no taxes involved to finance the private owned schools. No need to forbid if you have the money, or you lower taxes and only allow private schools and every parent has to choose school and pay all fees for all education.
/Tom