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Sunday, September 8, 2013

SUMMER HOURS

The new school year is now 2 weeks underway, so this post will cover my summer hours. "Summer break" officially started on Thursday, June 6th, and officially ended on Thursday, August 15th, for a total of 10 weeks. I only counted my hours until August 15, since the new school year started on August 16th.

I won't deny that it's very nice to be able to work when you want to work during the nicest months of the year. I also do not feel ashamed to say that I believe that I have earned the right to relax in the summer. People who complain about teachers getting "paid too much for working only 9 months" should try being a teacher. Fifty percent of all teachers leave the profession by year 5. It is definitely harder than it looks.

As I am reflecting on this past summer, I am seeing that I didn't work nearly as much as I thought I would. I had big aspirations about getting many different units completed, but time got away from me and I ended up being very busy doing all of the things I had denied myself over the previous 9 months (when I was working 12 hour days). Over the course of the 10 weeks, I worked a total of 61.5 hours. This brings my total number of hours worked from August 20, 2012 until August 15, 2013 to 2117 hours.

As stated in my last post in June, a normal full-time worker who sticks to a strict 40hr workweek will work 1952 hours in 1 year (this already takes into account 2 weeks of vacation plus 6 days of holidays when they don't work). As of June 6th, I had already clocked 103.5 hours more in 9 months than the average full-time worker does in a full year.

Now add my 61.5 hours from the summer, and my total number of hours worked is 165 hours MORE than the average full-time worker, which means that I worked the equivalent of 13 MONTHS of work in about 9 1/2 months.

There is no doubt in my mind that my career will get easier as time goes on. In fact, now that I am starting my 3rd year, I am seeing that I am much more efficient with my time than I was last year or the year before. I am also much more relaxed than before. So I understand that while this blog has been a serious endeavor, it should be noted that not all teachers experience the same things I do, and others could be in situations that are much easier or harder than my situation.

This blog has been a very fun and interesting experiment, and I plan to do it again in a few years when I am more experienced. I hypothesize that my hours will be lower the next time around, but I will know for sure when I pick up this experiment again (maybe in 3-4 years). I thank everyone who has followed and supported this blog, especially those of you who shared it with friends and colleagues. You all are great!

And with that, A Teacher's Life 2013 comes to a close. :)

Summer hours:
Day Date Start End Total Hours
Sat 6/15/2013 3:30 PM 6:30 PM 3
T 6/18/2013 8:00 AM 3:30 PM 7.5
9:00 PM 12:00 AM 3
W 6/19/2013 8:00 AM 4:00 PM 8
4:45 PM 5:30 PM 0.75
Th 6/20/2013 8:00 AM 3:45 PM 7.75
M 7/8/2013 3:00 PM 6:30 PM 3.5
Th 7/25/2013 11:15 AM 1:15 PM 2
F 7/26/2013 9:00 AM 1:15 PM 4.25
2:45 PM 4:30 PM 1.75
6:00 PM 8:00 PM 2
Sat 7/27/2013 4:30 PM 5:30 PM 1
Sun 7/28/2013 4:45 PM 8:30 PM 3.75
T 7/30/2013 6:00 PM 7:30 PM 1.5
Th 8/1/2013 10:45 AM 3:00 PM 4.25
M 8/5/2013 12:45 PM 3:45 PM 3
W 8/7/2013 2:15 PM 3:15 PM 1
5:00 PM 8:30 PM 3.5
Total 61.5

Thursday, June 13, 2013

FINAL HOURS

As the year has come to a close, I want to share with you my final data from the 2012-13 school year.

Total official work days in the 12-13 school year:

175 student contact days
14 extra days of professional development (including 2 conference days and 2 training days during MEA)
189 total official work days

Number of hours I worked in the 12-13 school year:
Total: 2055.5
Average hours per day (based on a 5-day workweek): 10.3
Average hours per week (based on a 5-day workweek): 51.3

How does this compare to other full-time jobs??
If a person worked every single weekday, without taking any days off except weekends, they would work 2080 hours in 1 year (52 weeks x 40 hours = 2080 hours). Taking into account vacation time (let's say people get 2 weeks), their year-long workload is then reduced to 2000 hours. Now factor in holidays (Christmas, New Years, 4th of July, Memorial Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, Presidents' Day, MLK Day, among others). Since many full-time workers don't get all of these days off, let's just say they get 6 extra days built into the year, which brings the work year down to 1952 total hours. That means that I worked 103.5 hours more than the average full-time worker who sticks to a strict 40-hour workweek. And that's NOT including anything worked during the summer (I will be recording those hours as well).

Other fun numbers from this last year:

22: Number of Saturdays I worked (out of 41 total)

38: Number of Sundays I worked (out of 41 total)

181: Number of hours I worked on weekends and holidays

77: Number of days I worked straight before taking my first day off (Nov. 4th)

5: Number of weeks I worked 60 hours or more.

4: Number of weeks I worked less than 40 hours (Thanksgiving, a week when I was sick 2 days, returning from winter break, final week when we had only 3 days). All of these days I worked around 30 hours.

491.5: Total hours of overtime throughout the year.

$510.50: Amount of my own money I have spent on school supplies this past year.

I thank everyone who has been following me this past school year. It has been a very fun experiment. I will be working this summer to develop next year's curriculum, and will record those hours as well. I will write a final blog post at the end of the summer before I start the next school year. Have an awesome summer, and don't forget to THANK YOUR TEACHERS! They work hard! :)

WEEKS 39 & 40: Finishing the year

The last day with students was Tuesday, June 4th. Teachers in Minneapolis then had June 5th to finish up grading their finals, tearing down their rooms, and packing everything up. You'd think that tearing down your room wouldn't take that long, but it surprisingly takes most of the day to get everything down and where it needs to be.

During the last week of school, I had students sign my wall. I did this last year as well, and I think this will become a tradition. It's hard to read, but in black it says "La pared de exito" (The wall of success) and underneath it says "Yo sobrevivi la clase de Srta. K" (I survived the class of Srta. K")



Here are my hours for weeks 39:

Day Date Start End Total Hours
Sun 5/26/2013 12:30 PM 2:15 PM 1.75
M 5/27/2013 6:45 PM 9:00 PM 2.25
T 5/28/2013 7:30 AM 6:00 PM 10.5
W 5/29/2013 8:00 AM 4:30 PM 8.5
Th 5/30/2013 7:15 AM 6:30 PM 11.25
F 5/31/2013 7:00 AM 4:30 PM 9.5
Sat 6/1/2013 0
Total 43.75

My hours for week 40 (only 2 days with students, 1 grading day):

Day Date Start End Total Hours
Sun 6/2/2013 9:00 PM 10:30 PM 1.5
M 6/3/2013 8:00 AM 4:30 PM 8.5
T 6/4/2013 8:15 AM 4:30 PM 8.25
W 6/5/2013 8:30 AM 4:30 PM 8
Total 26.25

Sunday, May 26, 2013

WEEK 38 - When Tragedy Strikes

This past week there was a tragedy in Saint Paul which involved students from Peter Hobart Elementary School in Saint Louis Park. A group of 4th grade students were fossil hunting at a park when the ground gave way and either completely or partially buried 4 students. Two students were injured but survived, and 2 students passed away after being buried under 5-6 feet of dirt and rubble. One of the deceased, Mohamed Fofana, was my student when I was a student teacher at Peter Hobart 2 years ago.

I did not have a deep relationship with Mohamed because I was only at the school for a few weeks, but the accident definitely shook me up a bit. It is devastating for everyone involved, and the family and classmates will have many difficult days ahead of them.

But today I want to talk about this event from the perspective of a teacher. As I was imagining and replaying the event over and over in my head, I started to think of what it would be like to lose one of the students in my current classes. I spend 1 hour a day with each student, and over the course of the year have developed great student-teacher relationships with many of them. I would feel destroyed if one of them passed away in such a horrendous way. And then I began to think of Mohamed and Haysem's teacher who spends all day every day with her students. She had to stand in front of her kids the next day and be the strong one to make sure their lives were as normal as possible. I'm sure she had the option to stay home the following day, but knowing the dedication of the Peter Hobart staff, I would assume that she chose to be the one with the kids the day after the tragedy, rather than leave that job to a substitute teacher.

As a teacher, you are expected to shut many of your emotions off when you're in front of students. It is not professional to show anger, you are not supposed to react to controversial news (then you are accused of brainwashing your students and not being impartial), and if you are having a bad day, most of the time you are just supposed to suck it up and make sure that learning is still happening. As a teacher, you are also expected to be the leader. Students look to their leaders for guidance, and I'm sure that 4th grade class was looking to their teacher to see how school would continue with 2 empty chairs in their classroom. That teacher probably wanted to hide away in a hole and not face the world the next day. What could possibly be on the lesson plan now??? How do you fill 6 hours every day after something like this happens??? How do you even have the energy to think up new activities???

My deepest condolences go out to the families and classmates of Mohamed Fofana and Haysem Sani. A speedy recovery to Lucas Lee and Devon Meldahl (injured in the landslide). My support and admiration to the rescuers, who ran straight down 30 feet of unstable dirt and rubble when they found out there were children buried (2 rescuers were injured by falling rocks). And a big hug to the teachers, who oftentimes are like a third parent, who have to guide their students through devastating events. You have earned your summer break.



My hours for week 38:

Day Date Start End Total Hours
Sun 5/19/2013 4:15 PM 8:15 PM 4
M 5/20/2013 7:30 AM 4:30 PM 9
T 5/21/2013 7:30 AM 4:30 PM 9
W 5/22/2013 8:00 AM 4:30 PM 8.5
Th 5/23/2013 8:00 AM 4:30 PM 8.5
F 5/24/2013 8:00 AM 3:30 PM 7.5
Sat 5/25/2013 0
Total 46.5

Sunday, May 19, 2013

WEEK 37 - 2 weeks left

I have worked a total of 481.25 hours of overtime so far, which comes out to 12 full-time weeks of overtime. At Washburn, our summer break starts on June 6th and we go back to school on August 16th, which comes out to about 10 weeks. This means that I have worked 2 weeks longer than people who work full-time year-round.

The last day of school is on June 4th, which means we have 2 weeks of school left before June 3 & 4 finals days. This is the final push!

Hours for week 37:

Day Date Start End Total Hours
Sun 5/12/2013 9:15 PM 10:00 PM 0.75
M 5/13/2013 7:45 AM 4:30 PM 8.75
5:00 PM 6:00 PM 1
9:15 PM 10:45 PM 1.5
T 5/14/2013 7:15 AM 4:45 PM 9.5
W 5/15/2013 8:00 AM 4:30 PM 8.5
Th 5/16/2013 7:15 AM 5:00 PM 9.75
F 5/17/2013 7:45 AM 3:45 PM 8
Sat 5/18/2013 0
Total 47.75


Sunday, May 12, 2013

WEEK 36: Teaching when it's nice out

Spring is finally here, and it has understandably affected students' motivation to learn and teachers' motivation to teach. We all remember back in the day when spring hit and the last place you wanted to be was sitting in a desk inside a big brick building. It makes it even harder when we're now 160 days into the school year and have been going full force for 8.5 months. Everyone - students and teachers alike - are worn out, and the weather outside is enticing.

So last week I brought my kids outside to work one day. Then, every day after that, when I said no to going outside, the kids were very upset. The kids (and I) want so badly to be able to enjoy the nice weather, but our system doesn't always allow it. I'll probably be bringing the kids out again this week, especially since the weather will be in the 70s most of the week.

16 days of school left! And counting...

Hours for week 36:

Day Date Start End Total Hours
Sun 5/5/2013 11:30 AM 1:15 PM 1.75
7:00 PM 8:30 PM 1.5
M 5/6/2013 11:00 AM 12:00 PM 1
12:45 PM 1:30 PM 0.75
3:00 PM 4:30 PM 1.5
8:30 PM 9:30 PM 1
T 5/7/2013   8:00 AM   5:00 PM 9
W 5/8/2013 7:45 AM 5:00 PM 9.25
8:15 PM 10:30 PM 2.25
Th 5/9/2013 7:15 AM 3:30 PM 8.25
F 5/10/2013 7:45 AM 3:15 PM 7.5
Sat 5/11/2013 11:30 AM 2:00 PM 2.5
Total 46.25

Sunday, May 5, 2013

WEEK 35 - Seeing students grow

One of the neatest things about teaching, I'm beginning to learn, is seeing students grow into young adults. We teachers spend 170-190 days with these students, and oftentimes build very strong teacher-student relationships. Then the year ends and the student gets a new teacher the next year, and another one the next year, etc. Before you know it, a few years have passed and you see a former student and think, "wow has he grown!" It has to be one of the coolest things I've experienced in teaching so far.

I got to thinking about this because recently I was contacted by a former student's mother. She wanted me to tutor her son Klaas this summer. Klaas was a freshman in my level 1 class when I was a student-teacher at Southwest High School a few years ago. He worked hard and spent some time in Spanish-speaking countries, and was able to skip levels 2 and 4 of Spanish, so next year he will be entering level 6 as a senior. I met with him this past Wednesday, and I was floored by his growth. Not just physically (he was very small as a freshman, but now he is taller than I am), but also in terms of maturity. He has more confidence, is very forward-thinking, and thinks deeply. His Spanish has also improved tenfold. Not only can he defend himself in Spanish, he can do it very grammatically-correct with a broad range of vocabulary! :)

I'm very excited to see what the future brings Klaas, because I know that when he graduates, he's going to go out there and do great things. The same can be said for many of my students now at Washburn. Most of these kids have no idea that they are destined for awesomeness, but we teachers often recognize it before they do. Yet, since we only get these students for a year, oftentimes we get to plant the seed but never see the flower. It is awesome when we get to see the final product, and know that we had a hand in its creation and development. Again, it's one of the most rewarding aspects of teaching I've encountered so far.

My hours for week 35:

Day Date Start End Total Hours
Sun 4/28/2013 5:30 PM 6:30 PM 1
9:30 PM 11:30 PM 2
M 4/29/2013 7:45 AM 3:15 PM 7.5
8:30 PM 9:45 PM 1.25
T 4/30/2013 7:15 AM 6:15 PM 11
W 5/1/2013 7:45 AM 6:30 PM 10.75
Th 5/2/2013 7:15 AM 6:00 PM 10.75
F 5/3/2013 7:30 AM 5:30 PM 10
Sat 5/4/2013 0
Total 54.25


Sunday, April 28, 2013

WEEK 34 - The case for year-round schooling

When most people in the US think about year-round schooling, they think it's absolutely crazy. The United States traditionally has had school years that span from September to June, which originally was to accommodate for the children who had to work in the fields during the summertime.

However, now that we have moved away from being a farming country, summer break for students is usually equated with relaxing, having a summer job, or taking vacations. When I was a student, I would have hated the idea of year-round schooling. Now that I'm a teacher, I see that there are many great reasons for it.

First of all, when I say "year-round schooling" I don't mean that students are in the classroom 5 days a week for the whole calendar year. Most schools that go year-round actually have the same amount of days in the classroom, but it's spread out over the whole year. Rather than having 4 quarters back-to-back and then having 3 months of vacation, students would have 1 quarter (9 weeks), then 3 weeks off. Then they'd have another quarter, then another 3 weeks off, etc.

Disadvantages of this would be that it would affect students' and teachers' abilities to get summer jobs, and some students would be in school in the heat without air-conditioning.

However, as a teacher, I feel like the advantages would far outweigh the disadvantages. Studies have shown that the first couple of months of the school year ends up being a review of the last year because kids forget things over the 3-month long summer. With only 3 weeks off at a time, it would be less likely that students would forget things, and in the long run, kids would learn more.

Additionally, it would help teachers plan better. To actually create a unit to teach in class takes a long time, and is extremely difficult to do during the school year. Therefore, many teachers do unit-writing during the summer. The disadvantage of this is that teachers are creating material without knowing the students or the students' needs. Contrary to what most people think, teachers can't always just use the same lessons over and over and over. Lessons are often changed or discarded based on the needs and abilities of the students. One year I might have a classroom filled with students with IEPs who need special modifications, and the next year I could have a group of kids that are complete high-fliers. No 2 groups of kids are ever the same and therefore lessons always change. If we had the 3 weeks in between each quarter, I could take the time to create new lessons based on what would work well with my students. Since we don't have that time, oftentimes my lessons are just thrown together because I have so many other things going on, like meetings and grading.

Also, I truly believe that human beings weren't made to go full force for 9 months and then have nothing for 3 months. The way things are set up now, students and teachers are expected to turn the switch on in September, then shut it off in June, but it is a highly ineffective way of doing things. We do this on a smaller scale as well, making students go full force with academics every day and cutting out recess, phy ed, and unstructured play time. Kids (and humans in general) are more efficient when they take frequent mental breaks.

My hours for week 34:

Day Date Start End Total Hours
Sun 4/21/2013 8:00 PM 10:15 PM 2.25
M 4/22/2013 7:45 AM 4:45 PM 9
T 4/23/2013 7:45 AM 4:15 PM 8.5
W 4/24/2013 7:45 AM 5:30 PM 9.75
10:30 PM 11:15 PM 0.75
Th 4/25/2013 7:45 AM 8:15 PM 12.5
F 4/26/2013 7:30 AM 3:45 PM 8.25
Sat 4/27/2013 0
Total 51

Sunday, April 21, 2013

WEEK 33 - Special Education (part 2)

Every student who receives special education services has what's called an "Individualized Education Plan" or IEP. An IEP is a very long document that lays out what the student's disability is, and what modifications and adaptations the student will receive because of his/her disability. For example, if a student is blind, they might have an IEP that states that tests can be done orally rather than by writing. If a student has a cognitive disability, the IEP might lay out strategies to help the teacher give clearer instructions. The IEP is different for every student, and has to be written by the Special Education teacher (a long process, they tell me).

This year I have 21 Special Education students. Their disabilities run the spectrum, from autism to hearing disabilities, to speech impediments to cognitive disabilities. A few examples of accommodations that I have to make are: giving more time to complete assignments, having the student seated to my left so he can hear with his good ear, testing in a separate room, checking in daily to make sure the student understands the instructions. Every student can have anywhere from 1-10 accommodations.  Because I have 21 kids who all receive different services, sometimes it can get confusing and I can make mistakes. Like I said in a previous post, the best thing a high school student can do is advocate for him/herself if they feel like their IEP is not being respected (take note, parents of students in Special Education). Because world language is an elective, we do not get help from the Special Education teachers (oftentimes the Sped teachers will be in the classroom as "collaborators" with the mainstream teacher, but we do not get this).

In a language classroom, we find that we have more students in Special Education in the lower levels than in the upper levels. After doing a quick glance over our records, we found that there were roughly the same amount of special ed students in levels 1 and 2, but then there was a massive drop-off in level 3, and there were none in levels 4, 5, or 6. One reason for this is that most of the time, students in special education enter into level 1 in high school because they didn't have room in their schedules to take a language in middle school. Another reason could be the way in which language is taught at the school might be difficult for the learner (if the student has a low reading ability in English, they'll most likely struggle in a foreign language if there is a focus on literature), and they might decide not to move on after 2 years.

From a language teacher's perspective, the best thing you can do for your child in Special Ed is get them as much exposure to language as possible before they enter high school. Nowadays, even students entering into level 1 have had some background in the language, and it's easy for kids without exposure to fall behind, especially if they are up against some type of disability.

My hours for week 33:

Day Date Start End Total Hours
Sun 4/14/2013 7:45 PM 9:30 PM 1.75
M 4/15/2013 7:45 AM 5:15 PM 9.5
T 4/16/2013 7:00 AM 4:15 PM 9.25
W 4/17/2013 7:45 AM 8:45 PM 13
Th 4/18/2013 7:15 AM 4:45 PM 9.5
F 4/19/2013 7:45 AM 3:45 PM 8
Sat 4/20/2013 0
Total 51

Sunday, April 14, 2013

WEEKS 31 & 32 - New Leadership

I am currently at 431 hours of overtime this school year. That amounts for nearly 11 weeks (or 2 months) of full time work...all of it extra.

It is with extremely mixed emotions that I write this post. This past week brought big changes at Washburn. For those of you in the Twin Cities area who read the news, you are probably aware of everything that has been going on at my high school. I won't go into everything here, but I will touch on the important facts. You are free to look up the rest on your own.

Over spring break, news broke that our athletic director was under investigation for a personnel matter involving money used to buy a new scoreboard for the school. Students rallied around him and staged a walk-out on the Monday back from break. Over 200 students (of the 1200 students who attend the school) walked out during 4th hour and didn't return. Two days later, again over 200 students staged a sit-in in front of the principal's office. That night, as a big surprise to many, the superintendent decided to relieve our principal of her duties at Washburn and bring on an interim principal to finish out the year, citing the need to stop all of the distractions and restore an effective learning environment to the school.

For most, it was a complete shock. Even some students who participated in the walk-out and sit-in didn't realize that their actions could have negative ramifications against the principal. For others who did not particularly care for Ms. Markham-Cousins, it was reason to celebrate.

Ms. Markham-Cousins was in her 6th year at Washburn, and had led a school turnaround which resulted in transforming the school from being one that many did not wish to attend to one that so many wished to attend.

With the risk of sounding biased, I would like to say that this has been a particularly difficult pill to swallow. Ms. Markham-Cousins was a principal who walked the halls and made a point to get to know the students by name. She popped into classrooms and visited teachers just to see how we were doing or if we needed anything. She fought to support the language department's effort to start a course geared towards teaching native Spanish speakers how to read and write (studies show that if they can read and write in their first language, their English scores go up). When the school performed the musical Fame last year, she attended 5 times. Before Ms. Markham-Cousins showed up, our school hadn't put on a musical in 17 years. Before her, we had 5 band directors in 6 years. Before her, the language department was half the size it is today.

The way in which we found out about this decision was difficult. There were about 5 minutes left of the last period of the day, and a student walked into my room and said, "Ms. K, I think you need to check your email." I quickly checked my email, but there was nothing. The bell rang, and as I was standing at the door saying goodbye to students, there were many students running the hallways yelling, "We got Ms. Cousins fired! We did it!" It wasn't until afterwards that the district notified us of this decision. The decision had been leaked to the media and made the Southwest Journal and Star Tribune before any of us knew. It was very difficult to find out this way.

Were there things that she could have handled differently? Absolutely. Is it easy for a teacher to suddenly be put under the direction of a new principal when there are only 35 days of school left? Absolutely not. For whatever reason (which the board will not disclose), the removal of our dedicated leader had to happen immediately. Hopefully the truth will come out eventually.

Below is the link to the story at our school. Please be mindful that not everything you read or hear is completely true.

http://www.southwestjournal.com/news/news/washburn-principal-markham-cousins-reassigned

Here are my hours for weeks 31 and 32.

Day Date Start End Total Hours
Sun 4/7/2013 12:30 PM 1:00 PM 0.5
9:00 PM 10:00 PM 1
M 4/8/2013 7:30 AM 4:00 PM 8.5
T 4/9/2013 7:30 AM 3:45 PM 8.25
8:45 PM 9:30 PM 0.75
W 4/10/2013 7:45 AM 4:00 PM 8.25
Th 4/11/2013 7:45 AM 4:30 PM 8.75
F 4/12/2013 7:30 AM 4:30 PM 9
Sat 4/13/2013 0
Total 45



Day Date Start End Total Hours
Sun 3/24/2013 8:30 PM 10:00 PM 1.5
M 3/25/2013 7:45 AM 4:45 PM 9
T 3/26/2013 7:45 AM 4:15 PM 8.5
5:45 PM 9:00 PM 3.25
W 3/27/2013 7:45 AM 4:30 PM 8.75
Th 3/28/2013 8:00 AM 4:00 PM 8
F 3/29/2013 9:15 AM 5:15 PM 8
Sat 3/30/2013 9:45 AM 11:30 AM 1.75
W 4/3/2013 10:30 AM 2:30 PM 4
Sat 4/6/2013 9:00 PM 10:30 PM 1.5
Total 54.25

Sunday, March 24, 2013

WEEK 30 - Special Education (part 1)

This week's post is on Special Education. Because this topic is so huge, today will only be part 1, and next week I will post part 2, and I hope that I can do it justice with my relatively limited knowledge.

Special Education in the United States has changed greatly over the past few decades. Years ago, it seemed like the students who received special education services were easy to pick out of a crowd. Maybe the student had Down Syndrome or some type of obvious behavioral indicators. These days, many times it is very difficult to tell if a student receives special education services.

There are many types of disabilities that are covered in special education. It can be autism, Asperger's Syndrome, ADHD, emotional disturbance, visual impairments, specific learning disabilities, mental retardation, speech impairments, physical impairments, cognitive disorders, dyslexia, hearing impairments, or many others.

In order to receive Special Education services, there is a rigorous testing to determine if the student has a disability and what that might be. This generally happens in the younger years, but every once in a while it happens in high school. There are many pieces to this rigorous testing, but I only see certain parts of it. The part that I am generally involved in is a long survey of questions about the student's performance, behavior, and abilities, and then a meeting with the student's other teachers, a nurse, a special education teacher, and the student's parents.

The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) of 1975 states that all children with disabilities, up to the age of 21, have the right to a free and fair education. The biggest thing to remember is that a "fair" education means different things for each individual student, regardless of ability or disability. Some students might have a speech impediment and need minimal services, spending their whole days in mainstream classes, while other students might need to have a few separate classes with special education teachers. Some might need to be completely removed from mainstream classes altogether. It all depends on the student and his/her needs.

Similarly, "fair" does not mean spending the same amount of money on every student. While it can be fairly cheap to educate a student in mainstream classes, it can become quite expensive to educate a student with extensive disabilities. The Star Tribune (Minneapolis-St. Paul newspaper) recently ran a story on a student whose education costs ran up to $100,000 a year. This is extremely rare, but the fact of the matter is that a big chunk of education costs go to special education, a fact that many people are unaware of. While I know that some people might disagree with how money is spent in schools, as a teacher I see just how important it is to give these services, regardless of the cost. Every student has a right to an education, and we cannot deny a person's rights simply because it costs too much. Not educating students with disabilities would be detrimental to our entire society, not just the student. Plus, with the right support, a student can overcome their disability and go on to do great things. Some famous people who did just that include: Christopher Columbus, JFK, Edgar Alan Poe, Bill Gates, Will Smith, Michael Phelps, and Bill Clinton.

As a high school teacher, one thing I have noticed is that most of the time, by the time a student hits high school, they have accepted that they have a disability and they know what it is that they need in order to be successful. However, one of the most important things a high school student with disabilities can do is advocate for him/herself. While an elementary school teacher might have 3-4 students in special education, a high school teacher can have anywhere between 20-30 students. Each of those students has their own IEP (Individualized Education Plan) which calls for different modifications and accommodations for each student. This can be very confusing and overwhelming for a teacher, and if a student can give his/her teachers a reminder, it helps greatly.

Next week I will talk about IEPs and what it's like to be a student with special needs in a World Language classroom.

My hours for week 30:

Date Start End Total Hours
3/17/2013 6:30 PM 7:00 PM 0.5
3/18/2013 7:45 AM 4:30 PM 8.75
3/19/2013 8:00 AM 4:45 PM 8.75
5:45 PM 6:15 PM 0.5
7:15 PM 7:45 PM 0.5
8:15 PM 9:45 PM 1.5
3/20/2013 7:45 AM 4:45 PM 9
6:30 PM 9:30 PM 3
3/21/2013 7:30 AM 7:30 PM 12
3/22/2013 7:45 AM 3:45 PM 8
3/23/2013 0
Total 52.5

Sunday, March 17, 2013

WEEK 29 - Just My Hours

This week, my post will be simply my hours. Stay tuned for next week's post, which will be on Special Education and IEPs (Individualized Education Plans).

Date Start End Total Hours
3/10/2013 9:00 PM 12:15 AM 3.25
3/11/2013 8:00 AM 4:00 PM 8
3/12/2013 8:00 AM 6:30 PM 10.5
10:00 PM 10:30 PM 0.5
3/13/2013 8:00 AM 5:45 PM 9.75
9:00 PM 9:30 PM 0.5
3/14/2013 7:45 AM 5:45 PM 10
3/15/2013 7:45 AM 4:15 PM 8.5
6:15 PM 7:45 PM 1.5
3/16/2013 0
Total 52.5

Sunday, March 10, 2013

WEEKS 27 & 28: Snow day...sort of

Sorry for the 2 week hiatus. I was swamped with everything I had to do to prepare and execute my upper level IB exams. This week's post will include the hours from both week 27 (Feb 24-Mar 2) and week 28 (Mar 3 - Mar 9).

Anyone who grew up in Minnesota (or most northern states, for that matter) has experienced the great holiday known as the Snow Day. We've all had the exciting feeling at 10pm when we look out our windows and then cross-check what we are seeing with what the weather channel is predicting for the rest of the night. Will they call the day off the next morning?? For Minnesotans, who are pretty hard-core and are generally prepared to handle large amounts of snow in short amounts of time, the thought of a Snow Day usually ends up being wishful thinking.

And that's what happened Tuesday morning for Minneapolis students. 

Mother Nature dumped so much snow on Minnesota that nearly the whole southern part of the state got a snow day. But Minneapolis and St. Paul did not cancel school. There is a good reason for this; Minneapolis has over 30,000 students in its district alone, so to cancel school is a huge deal for many families, especially those families with elementary age children where the parents work (they would have to find a babysitter very quickly). 

So what happens when we have a snowy day without an actual Snow Day? I got stuck on my way in to work twice, and when I arrived our principal announced at our staff meeting (that wasn't canceled) that we had 6 teachers out who didn't have subs. In my first hour, I have 29 students on my roster. When class started, I had 4 students in my classroom. They were supposed to take a test that day, but I couldn't give a test when only 4 students were there for the whole hour. As more and more students started strolling in, I would have had to go over the instructions 10-15 times, and I wouldn't have been able to keep track of who had how much time already. So I postponed the test for 1st hour and made something up on the spot. Because I didn't want my classes to be in different places (any teacher knows that this can be stressful), I ended up postponing the test for all of my classes. So in reality, we didn't get a snow day, but we sort of did...

My hours for week 27:

Date Start End Total Hours
2/24/2013 5:30 PM 6:45 PM 1.25
8:45 PM 11:15 PM 2.5
2/25/2013 7:45 AM 6:30 PM 10.75
2/26/2013 7:45 AM 6:30 PM 10.75
9:30 PM 11:00 PM 1.5
2/27/2013 7:45 AM 5:30 PM 9.75
2/28/2013 7:45 AM 8:15 PM 12.5
3/1/2013 8:00 AM 12:15 PM 4.25
3/2/2013 1:30 PM 3:00 PM 1.5
4:00 PM 5:30 PM 1.5
Total 56.25

My hours for week 28:

Date Start End Total Hours
3/3/2013 6:45 PM 8:30 PM 1.75
3/4/2013 7:30 AM 4:45 PM 9.25
3/5/2013 7:30 AM 4:15 PM 8.75
3/6/2013 7:45 AM 5:30 PM 9.75
3/7/2013 7:15 AM 5:45 PM 10.5
3/8/2013 8:00 AM 4:00 PM 8
6:15 PM 8:15 PM 2
3/9/2013 9:15 AM 10:30 AM 2.25
Total 52.25

Monday, February 25, 2013

WEEK 26 - Why do teachers quit?

Why do teachers quit?

"I mean, seriously...they have so much vacation time, summers off, they only work from 8-3, they get benefits, a steady pay, and a nice pension. Teachers are so spoiled!"

How many times have you heard those words? I hear this a lot, and while some things are true (we get benefits, a steady pay, and a pension, and we're not technically on the clock during the summer), it still doesn't explain why the average career of a teacher is only 5 YEARS.

That's right 50% OF TEACHERS QUIT BY YEAR 5.

Yikes!

If all of the benefits listed above are so great, then why would half of all teachers bail, some even after gaining tenure? For those of you who think that teachers are pampered and should be paid less because students aren't doing as well as in the past, the aforementioned statistic indicates that teaching is probably not such a cakewalk as one might think. I mean, in order for someone to walk away from "such awesome benefits," it must mean that the job is harder than it seems.

So why do teachers quit?

Here is my 2 cents.

1. Paperwork
We do paperwork every time we have an observation, every time there is a substitute teacher, every time we have to order books, tissues, post-its, etc, every time we have a special ed student who needs to be evaluated, every time a student is not behaving well, and every fall, winter, and spring when we have to write our "professional development plans." There are more instances when paperwork has to be filled, but these are just the ones off the top of my head.

2. Changing curriculum
Believe it or not, most teachers can't simply reuse all of their materials year after year after year. Students change, attitudes change, cultures change, current events are different, state and federal standards change, and the district buys new books that are different. Another big factor is that there is always research "uncovering" the newest, best ways to teach.

Schools also often change. For example, Washburn recently became an International Baccalaureate school, and in a couple of years we will become a Middle Years Programme school. What this means is that all of our lessons have to fit the format of the IB and MYP programs. These programs also come with a host of new assessments that are...guess what? NEW to all of us. Even the most seasoned teachers at our school have been adjusting their curriculum to all of the changes.

3. Babysitting
Let's face it. Even though I teach high schoolers, sometimes I feel like I am babysitting kindergartners. For some reason, many students haven't been taught to value education and haven't been taught how to act appropriately in a school setting. When I call home to report on what little Johnny did in class, many times the parents don't know what to do either.

Also, I've got a good handful of students who have been mentally checked out most of the year, but there is absolutely nothing I can do but try and try and try to get them to do something.

4. Parents
It seems like there are 3 types of parents. The majority of parents fall under what I would call "normal" parents who care about their child's education and support their child's teachers.

The second is the "helicopter parent" who is far too involved in his/her child's life, micromanaging everything and questioning why their child got an A- on an assignment when "she clearly did the best she could." These parents many times put pressure on the teacher to give a higher grade than their child deserves.

The last parent is the absent or enabling parent. This parent either does not take an interest in their child's education or does not know how to instill the value of education in their child. This parent would also not think twice about calling or texting their child in the middle of class, and then would be angry at the teacher for not letting their child answer their phone in the middle of class (this happened to me 2 weeks ago).

5. Poor funding
Funding for education is being cut left and right. The result is that teachers are left with very few supplies, many times having to buy their own supplies. Last year alone I spent over $300 in supplies for my classroom. We are only 2 months into the calendar year and I am already at about $160. Yes, this is tax-deductible, but the fact that I have to make extra trips to the store because I don't have tissues or pencils for my classroom is not something most people realize we teachers have to do.

6. Class sizes
Another consequence of low funding is that class sizes are much larger now than they used to be. In my first year of teaching, most of my classes were between 33-36 students. That's A LOT OF BODIES and A LOT OF MINDS to shape. Also, it can be extremely stressful to have to grade 150 papers rather than 100 papers. One of my colleagues figured out that if she spent 5 minutes on each of her Spanish 3 students' essays, she'd spend 11 HOURS grading 1 assignment.

7. Pay
Yes, pay. Teachers in the US average about $50,000/yr salary. This is a nice, comfortable pay, in my opinion. Yet, it is far lower than what most people with similar educational degrees make. Many teachers have master's degrees, and could be making more in another field. For some, the amount of pay coupled with the amount of work is just not worth it, and they leave for greener pastures.

8. Social backlash
As students' scores go lower and lower, more and more vitriol is directed towards teachers. Many think that it's the teachers' fault that our students aren't performing on par with other nations' students. Teachers hear this and quite frankly, are spinning their wheels trying to do everything they can to get kids up to snuff in their academic abilities. But it is really unfair to place all the blame on the teachers, as teachers are not the only educators in a child's life. In order for a student to be successful, s/he needs to have the support of the family and the community, not just the teacher. When people start talking about slashing teacher pay because students aren't performing as well as they used to, the teachers who are doing everything they can start to think, "well, what's the point?"

9. Meetings
I wish I had tallied the amount of time I have spent in meetings this year. At the very least, we have 1.5 hours of meetings every week for staff, committee, or department meetings. On top of that, we have 1 IEP (Individualized Education Plan) meeting for every special education student (I have 18 this year). We have emergency meetings when there are incidents like brawls or racial incidents. When a student is not being successful in our class and is acting out, many times we have meetings with that student and a Dean, or with a parent. Meetings, meetings, meetings. If you're not a teacher, you have no idea...

10. That evil copy machine
Every business has one. Teaching is no different. Aaaaaarrrrgh. :)

My hours for week 26:

Day Date Start End Total Hours
Sun 2/17/2013 0
M 2/18/2013 0
T 2/19/2013 7:30 AM 5:00 PM 9.5
6:30 PM 8:30 PM 2
9:15 PM 9:45 PM 0.5
W 2/20/2013 7:45 AM 4:15 PM 8.5
Th 2/21/2013 7:15 AM 5:45 PM 10.5
6:30 PM 7:30 PM 1
8:00 PM 9:30 PM 1.5
F 2/22/2013 7:45 AM 4:15 PM 8.5
Sat 2/23/2013 0
Total 42