As a secondary educator, I am dedicated to helping my students become independent thinkers. I want them the grow and learn independent of me
Wednesday, June 21, 2017
UnWritten Soul: Changing the mindset
UnWritten Soul: Changing the mindset: As I sit here on the second to last day of summer school, after a particularly difficult year as an educator, I contemplate my future. Over...
Changing the mindset
As I sit here on the second to last day of summer school, after a particularly difficult year as an educator, I contemplate my future. Over the past year, more than any other, I ponder if it is worth it. I teach in predominately white, semi-rural district that has nowhere near the amount of socioeconomic or social-emotional problems that inner city or bigger districts have but the mindset of students seem to be the same all over as I converse with educators. As I sit here, my daily @TeachingTolerance.org newsletter comes in my email. Within this is an open letter to teachers from a former teacher. The letter was meant to help inspire us to keep moving on. However, it seemed to make me more discouraged.
Within this article, she speaks about going to a conference at Harvard where she spoke to educators from around the world. One of the people she spoke to said the following.
These two sentences at the end of this article sank my heart into my stomach. Until that very moment. I never saw what I did as a liability. But in America, that is exactly what teachers are. We are not valued as educated professionals that have studied and worked on their craft. We are just a line item on a budget report. What do we as educators do with this knowledge?
Within this article, she speaks about going to a conference at Harvard where she spoke to educators from around the world. One of the people she spoke to said the following.
In Singapore, a country with few natural resources, the education system is built on the understanding that the nation’s most valuable resources are its people. A leader in Singaporean education told us that, in his country “education is investment, not expenditure,” and that “teachers plan the future.”
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