Jeff for America

Teacher this, teacher that

Posted in Education, Teaching by jmanassero on January 4, 2010

The NYTimes recently published two stories about teachers that caught my attention. One, thanks to my iPhone and the other, thanks to my roommate Becca. Check out the links below for the full articles, or read on for some highlights that might intrigue you.

The Replacements, Carolyn Bucior

As much as I became frustrated by the lack of training and support, I was most angered by how many days teachers were out of their classrooms. Nationwide, 5.2 percent of teachers are absent on any given day, a rate three times as high as that of professionals outside teaching and more than one and a half times as high as that of teachers in Britain. Teachers in America are most likely to be absent on Fridays, followed by Mondays.

This means that children have substitute teachers for nearly a year of their kindergarten-through-12th-grade education. Taxpayers shell out $4 billion a year for subs.

I subbed for many legitimately ill teachers and for many attending educational conferences. But my first assignment was to fill in for a sixth-grade teacher who went to a home-and-garden show. My last was for a first-grade teacher who said she needed a mental health day because her class was so difficult.

Gauging the Dedication of Teacher Corps Grads, Amanda Fairbanks

In areas like voting, charitable giving and civic engagement, graduates of Teach for America lag behind those who were accepted but declined and those who dropped out before completing their two years, according to Doug McAdam, a sociologist at Stanford University, who conducted the study with a colleague, Cynthia Brandt.

The reasons for the lower rates of civic involvement, Professor McAdam said, include not only exhaustion and burnout, but also disillusionment with Teach for America’s approach to the issue of educational inequity, among other factors.

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