The Current DC Public School Dilemma: An Analysis and Proposed Remedy

As for the D.C. acim, there are currently quite a few certified educators who are excellent teachers of their respective disciplines, but poor surrogate parents. This is because they weren’t trained by their universities, and hired by the District, to be parents, but, rather, teachers. These professional educators were not expecting to find three-out-of-five elementary, middle, and high school students, in DC, to be behavior problems.

They weren’t expecting to find the majority of kids in their classes unprepared for public school, children who don’t have parents or guardians who really want to teach them vitally basic socialization skills, skills needed for an atmosphere of respect and courtesy to preside in a classroom. Certainly, if D.C. elementary school children enter the first grade behaviorally and socially unprepared to receive classroom instruction, and, thereafter, are the recipients of continual negligible parenting at home, only one sad result in learning will happen under the current system.

These behaviorally dysfunctional, and unteachable, elementary students will, for the sake of political expediency, will be indulged and passed-on by most of their teachers to the next higher grade, and the next, without ever learning the rudiments of a sound education, until they are in high school unsocialized, and unable to read, write, and perform math at their respective grade-levels.

What happens in most cases, in the classrooms of teachers readily conforming to the expectations of school principals (who are more concerned with the number of students certified as passing from one grade to the next, than with whether those students have actually met the academic standards for promotion) is an unfortunate toleration of unsocialized disruptive students that persistently make academic instruction and learning very difficult, if not impossible, to achieve. You see, it doesn’t currently reflect well on school administrations when 30-to-50 percent of their students are considered failures in Math, English, and reading classes.

Ironically, the persistently resiliant DC classroom teachers, the ones who have refused to tolerate the attrocious behaviors of poorly prepared, recalcitrant students, and to pass them on to the next higher grade when they’ve failed to achieve passing marks, are those who have been unjustly censured by their school principals, and the central DC administration, for earnestly endeavoring, but failing to educate these chronically incorrigible preadolescent and adolescent children. After bending over backwards to help these children learn, these teachers have been terribly villified for refusing to mollycoddle them and to certify that they were suitable for promotion, when they weren’t.

Teachers should not be made responsible for the negative and hostile attitudes that accompany public school children from their homes into the classroom, and they should not be required to spend their valuable time indulging the anti-social behaviors of such students. Parents, instead, should be held responsible, under law, for the prevailing negative attitudes of their children, and the classroom behaviors these poor attitudes generate.

Yet, in August 2008, seventy-five certified D.C. teachers were dismissed by D.C. School Chancellor Michelle Rhee for conduct she considered unbecoming of public school teachers. This conduct ranged from skipping required meetings and violating protocols with principals, to sending mass emails rebuking supervisors to entire school staffs. Some of these teachers were also accused of poor classroom management skills, being AWOL from school, not following or having lesson plans, ignoring suggestions for improvement, rude and aggressive demeanor, doing nothing to improve high student failure rate, and other behavior-based charges.

Now, I may not know any of those teachers personally, but I have taught in a variety of public school settings, inner-urban, suburban, and rural, and know two very important general characteristics about most principals and assistant principals. Just like most federal and state judges are mediocre attorneys who could not fully succeed in the private-sector, most principals and assistant principals are mediocre teachers who couldn’t fully succeed in the classroom. Most of them knew, however, how to play politics well enough at the district-level to get selected for those lucretive administrative positions (much higher in salary than regular classroom teachers), and when they land the jobs, they take their classroom inadaquacies with them. The real heroes of the American public schools are, on the other hand, those persistent, highly qualified classroom teachers who spend long hours preparing and delivering excellent subject lessons, who adamantly refuse to accept intolerable behaviors from their students, and set obtainable behavioral and academic standards in their classes, which they firmly enforce.

The majority of the secondary school principals, assistant principals, and coaches that I have known, over the years (in Texas and Washington State) who have sidelined their primary administrative and athletic duties with academic instruction, have, in most cases, been extremely popular with most of their students because of their less-than-demanding instructional classroom requirements. One particular baseball coach, who also taught senior American government in a small, but affluent, East Texas high school, was very popular for his tradition of frequently writing across the curriculum in a majority of his classes, in order to appease what he called the beastly behavior of seniors.

On several occasions, when his government classes were supposedly involved with studying the significance of the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights, some of his athletes (who were also his students) were experiencing bad Mondays because they had lost football games the previous Fridays. So, for his Monday lessons on the American Constitution, this coach wrote across the curriculum and assigned 45 minute essays for all of his students. On the blackboard he wrote, “Tell me, in a 2 page composition, how you would feel if you were an old, worn-out tennis shoe. You may leave and go to the cafeteria when you finish.” This coach told me privily that he always made

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *