The school board never asked, so this teacher told them as she quit.
In letter to her school board, reported in the Washington Post, a veteran teacher told them what they never asked and probably don't want to know. It was her resignation letter. It is reproduced here in its entirety.io
I feel that we as teachers have really had enough, and
that someone needs to finally speak up. My name is Abby Breaux and I
have been teaching for 25 years in Lafayette Parish, yet no one in this
room knows me because no one here has ever come to the schools in which
I’ve taught and just asked me, “What do you as a teacher think?”
I keep hearing statements that only ineffective teachers are leaving
the system. This upsets me. Many, and I mean many, teachers like me who
have been evaluated as effective and highly effective for many years by
their administration are leaving the public schools. These are teachers
that have been elected Teacher of the Year, LEF [Lafayette Education
Foundation] winners, and many have received other awards. Even more than
that, we have played a part in hundreds of thousands of students
becoming great citizens and grownups! Teachers have also been criticized
for leaving during the year, for interrupting the students learning.
But, these teachers have had enough, and many are actually getting
physically sick and can’t make it to the end.
Teachers are not the bad guys here. You tell society that we have
three months off in the summer and get off at 3:30 in the afternoon.
Well, I can tell you for a fact that we work at least 10 months a year.
What about all the teachers that either get to school early or stay
late? We give up a lot of time for our school children- sometimes our
students are getting more time than our families. What about all of us
who still after 25 or more years, are working all day and then are
working more hours at night? What about all the hours we volunteer to
coach, chaperone dances, plan field trips, and sponsor clubs? We stay
late after school for meetings and programs, and we are constantly
grading papers, at night, on weekends, and even on vacations. We attend
in-services for either no or minimal pay in the summer or on weekends.
Not to mention all of our OWN MONEY we spend on students. I can’t tell
you how many THOUSANDS of dollars I have spent over the years for
science and social studies supplies for my classroom alone.
Buying our own paper and ink, team celebrations, class rewards,
incentives, classroom decorations, primary sources, books, etc…. And if
you think that doesn’t happen. Again, ask a real classroom teacher! So
don’t tell me that teachers don’t care!
No one ever really asks us what the real problems are, nor do they
ask US how to solve them. You’ve hired people from a state that is #50
in the rankings to fill our positions. I could almost understand if you
got someone from a state ranked in the top 10! We have plenty of
experience and highly qualified professionals right here in Lafayette
Parish. If they are not applying for the job, then the question needs to
be asked. WHY?
You make us pilot all of these new programs year after year that have
been tried already (just under another name), not worked-and tried
again. We keep reinventing the wheel! I hear often that teachers don’t
teach any more. We don’t!
You have made us information pushers, test givers, and paper passer
outers. LET US TEACH!!! You have taken all of this away. You give us a
new common core curriculum that is almost impossible to finish in a
year, and now you slide in Compass, new evaluations, JPams, and On
Course all in a single year, and all which require more time that we
just don’t have. You are setting teachers up to fail. Teaching was once a
noble and creative profession. Learning was once fun! If you want kids
to stay in school, make them want to come!!!
Our jobs should not depend on two lessons a year. Principals should
be able to walk into a classroom any time and do a true evaluation. To
tell children that OUR jobs depend on them-well you are giving the
students the “upper hand”!
They now have the power and they know it. I have heard some students
say that they are not even going to try on the standardized tests. They
are even “out” for some teachers and are going to score low on purpose.
Many students won’t do their homework or study for tests-WHY? They know
they won’t fail because of your policies. You have made it all about
“what the teacher needs to do” instead of “what the student needs to
do!” HOLD them responsible! Would a doctor lose his job if his diabetic
patient didn’t follow their recommendations for losing weight when that
patient is hospitalized for his/her choices? Of course not! The
educational system is no different. We should not be held responsible
for apathy and wrong choices!
If you really want to change one thing in our school system-start
with discipline: SIMPLE nothing else, just DISCIPLINE. Follow through
from first grade on up to twelfth grade. Be consistent, give
consequences. Teachers should not be repeating rules to the same
students over and over again. If you would listen to experienced
teachers who have good discipline, it works and learning is going on. No
fancy programs, no bells and whistles, just the teacher in charge. Stop
moving students from school to school. This just dilutes other schools!
You are hiding the problems-NOT solving them! The same students that
we saw get away with the “little infractions” over and over, and over
again, are the same students that end up in the paper under “local
arrests”. We are not here to be popular or please parents, we are here
to teach children. Small things like uniforms, gum chewing, and tardies
may seem small to you, but to a classroom teacher they are the small
things that lead to larger problems like disrespect. If you don’t back
us up on these issues, the students know it and lose respect for us.
Don’t give in half way through the year, or keep changing things. Follow
through. Back your teachers up! You have taken our “power” away. No
Discipline=No Teaching-Period!
You have basically taken “morals” and work ethics out of ours
schools, yet now our tax money is paying for students to go to private
schools where they teach morals and work ethics. I believe we should
bring BOTH back to our schools, and this will bring our students back as
well.
You want to save one child by not removing them from the classroom or
campus because you don’t want THAT child to miss out on learning, but
you are doing a TOTAL injustice to the average and above average
students who want to learn and know how to behave. The others are NOT
learning because teachers are spending their time repeatedly correcting,
constantly documenting, meeting one on one, and conferencing with the
one child who chooses not to behave. I have about 10 daily behavior
plans with only 2 out of the 10 working. Why is this? There is no follow
through at home! Teachers work harder than the parents and the child to
help that child succeed. If you do not think this is true, again, just
ask a classroom teacher!
All teachers are different and that is what makes public education so
special. Students get the affection, nurturing, life lessons, and
education from each of them over their twelve years. Some experiences
will be good, some not so good, but that is called life!!! Children need
to learn to cope! They need this skill for the rest of their lives, so
they can become good problem solvers on their own and not have
everything catered and changed to their every desire. Having their
parents just being able to call the central office and have teachers
give in to “solve the problem” to make it easier for the child is not a
coping skill. You are doing the students and parents a total injustice.
Computers have been an asset in the classroom as a learning tool for
students. The school board and state however seem to have incorporated
them as tools for teachers to do more meaningless work! We should have
computers and laptops for the students to use as resources, not for
teachers to type and retype and retype again. You would not want us
asking students to redo a project three times and then never grade it.
Why do you keep giving us surveys and paperwork that you will never
read? A perfect example is our VAM [value-added measures] Evaluations!
All of this is taking away from our teaching time!
Is there a reason why we in Lafayette Parish (a parish that has MONEY
compared to most) still cannot get enough books for our students in the
classroom, yet we have money to waste on silly job positions and in
services. This is not just this year or last year; this has been an
ongoing occurrence. Teachers should not have to scrape and scramble for
books and paper every year! To you this might be minor, but for us, the
classroom teachers, this is a major issue and affects morale.
If you think getting rid of experienced classroom teachers is the
answer, then shame on you! It takes experienced teachers to help new,
inexperienced teachers with the overwhelming burdens of classroom
management, helping with background knowledge of the information being
taught, and learning how to build relationships with the students and
the community that these students come from. There is SO much more to
teaching then getting in front of a class and giving a lesson!
Personally, I was hoping to teach for at least 30 years, but because
of all these new evaluation policies, fear of retirement issues, and
feeling constantly threatened that if I don’t do “this or that” I will
lose my job, I and many others have had enough and feel the need to
leave. I LOVE TEACHING and never thought this day would come. I love
working with kids. You have basically pushed me and many excellent,
effective teachers out of the education field or into the private sector
with all of your useless paperwork and lack of follow through. I know I
may get some “recoil” for what I am saying today, but what I am saying
is the truth, and it is something that most teachers say and think every
day. Many are afraid to speak up and this is something that I too have
been holding in for years because of the same reason. Please, sit down
with the CLASSROOM teachers and work with them. But above all, GO TO A
CLASSROOM! Don’t choose a “favored, high scoring” school. Go to a
struggling school and observe a classroom. Better yet, since you are
supposed to be people of “service”, substitute in a classroom. Your eyes
will be opened to how difficult it is to do this job on a daily basis.
I am very proud to have worked with the many amazing and hardworking
teachers, administrators and staff over the years in Lafayette Parish.
We want a positive system and a system that continues to improve as much
or even MORE than you. We would really like for you to not only hear
us, but make some necessary changes.
Thank you,
Abby Breaux
Wow, some things can better be said out loud, but some people have to wait long before they can just say it
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