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Teaching is unique and challenging
Bruce Lear
Aug. 27, 2023 5:00 am
The butter cow is in cold storage. In stores, back-to-school supplies are supplanted by Halloween. From the looks of Facebook, parents mostly won the first day photo battle and got the cherished shot of their kids holding a paper plate with their new grade announced boldly.
School has started.
It’s a hectic time for both parents and teachers. Even though there might be a hundred memes celebrating when the kids finally go back to school, parents feel a heart flutter on that first day. No, it’s not AFib. It’s caused by knowing time doesn’t stand still, and those paper plate photos will soon be what’s left of their school years.
Another secret is that teachers started preparing long before the first day. They’ve braved scalding building temperatures and custodian scowls to get their rooms ready on their own time with their own dime. They didn’t need meetings filled with motivational slogans. They were motivated to get it done for their kids.
Teachers at all levels understand their kids. Elementary teachers make their rooms cocoons of learning. They make cute name tags for desks and design attractive centers for learning.
Middle school and high school teachers don’t worry as much about rooms. They work to find ways to motivate undermotivated adolescents to the next level of their lives. That’s a challenge but that’s their calling.
Teaching is unique and challenging. As we start a new year, here are some observations about that unique profession.
• Teachers pray every new year for reasonable class sizes. It’s not just workload. It’s about being able to do more creative teaching with 15 kids instead of 30. Class size matters.
• From 5th grade up, they pray parents have taught their kids about deodorant, especially right after a hot PE class.
• Teachers train their bladders. Unlike any other profession, they go on a schedule.
• It’s the only profession you get to buy new school clothes even when you’re 50.
• Teachers are not interchangeable. An Involuntary transfer where a first-grade teacher is moved to middle school is like moving a cardiac surgeon to an orthopedic case. Both are highly qualified doctors, but their specialties are different. Teaching is the same way. The teacher shortage cannot be solved with involuntary transfers.
• Teachers feel called to teach, but they weren’t called to a life of poverty. If Iowa wants to cure the teacher shortage, pay more and improve their working conditions. “If you build it, they will come.”
• When was the last time you hugged the dentist, you had as a kid? I bet if you saw your favorite teacher in the mall, you would.
• Once you’ve been in a teacher’s class, you are one of their kids forever. Teachers love to hear from their kids. Email or call them.
• Teachers want parents to partner in their child’s education. Please, look at your kids’ papers, read to them at night, help with homework, come to parent teacher conferences, come to concerts and programs. Only A.M. radio and Right-wing TV believe teachers try to exclude parents. They don’t.
• Don’t believe everything you hear about what’s happening at school. Instead, find out by asking a teacher.
• Book banners are never the good guys. Let teachers decide what is age appropriate. They know.
• If you want to appreciate teachers, vote for politicians who don’t use their profession as a political punch line.
• Teachers are told to diversify instruction, and then they are measured by standardized tests. That’s crazy.
Let teachers teach, and miracles will happen, and kids will grow into happy, healthy adults you’ll want to have as neighbors.
Bruce Lear lives in Sioux City and has been connected to public schools for 38 years. He taught for 11 years and represented educators as an Iowa State Education Association regional director for 27 years until retiring. BruceLear2419@Gmail.com
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