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Posts Tagged ‘education’

Objects in Mirror Are Closer Than They Appear

Photo by Jake Weirick on Unsplash

The final bell, for me the sound of retirement and freedom, waited to ring on the last day of school, out of reach and far away. 

Then it shrilled in my ears, and in spite of the scramble of finals, grading, and packing, caught me unprepared. 

The last student out the door, the last box in my car, the last key turned in…

Now I’m home, trying to digest how this is different from any other beginning of summer vacation. 

No more repetitive compliance videos, completed every summer to prove I hadn’t regressed mentally.

No more assigned professional development of little relevance to my content.

No more student apathy, disdain, or disrespect.

No more learning 150+ names every August, taking attendance, or marking tardies.

No more Eduphoria, Skyward, or teaching software, ad nauseum.

No more policing cell phones, or cheating, or bullying.

No more begging for late/missing assignments from the unmotivated.

No more redundant paperwork of no benefit to students.

No more fear of a lawsuit for protecting myself or stating the obvious and the truth.

No more documenting of differentiating instruction for IEP’s or 504’s–otherwise known as good teaching.

No more lesson prep which I may or may not follow, as my best lessons are dynamic and adjusted on the fly to meet students’ immediate needs.

No more battles with a copy machine with a personal grudge against me.

No more grading approximately 2,000 assignments every six weeks.

No more wearing a “harness”–lanyard with keys and ID, required at all times and most definitely during security drills, preparing for the random school shooter. 

Also, no more student hugs, wholehearted and awkward, or clumsily worded notes of gratitude left on my desk.

No more camaraderie with fellow teachers, commiserating about yet another mandate from the state.

No more invigorating pep rallies with confetti and fan fervor.

No more moments when the lesson pops, and the kids get it.

No more returning to my language classroom, with vibrant curtains of Seville, my copy of Neruda’s sonnets, and an Aztec calendar on the wall.

No more meet-the-teacher evenings, with curious parents and apprehensive students, shy and eager. 

No more busy buzz of students returning after a break, eager to see friends and make a fresh start.

No more satisfying restocking of pens, pencils, journals, tape, glue sticks, post-it notes, and hand sanitizer.

No more finishing out a grading cycle with the satisfaction that comes with closure. 

No more classroom jokes gently binding my students and me together in an agreement of cooperation and good humor.

No more being among the young and feeling the energy of possibilities and dreams. 

I am tired. It’s been a good run. I am ready to let it go. 

But I still glance in the rear view mirror and remember.

© 2025 Joyce Martin. All rights reserved

Note: None of my content is AI generated. 

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Then do you have the right skills for the “real world”?

Note & disclaimer: These are my opinions and observations, based on anecdotal research, but please give them some consideration. I am a teacher approaching retirement from education, looking to transition to other employment.

With teachers leaving education in droves (due to unsustainable work loads, low pay, student behaviors, etc.), they obviously are seeking employment elsewhere. 

Though many are older, they are not necessarily ready for full retirement. They must transition into other career paths. While willing to take a pay cut temporarily, they need jobs with opportunities to advance on the pay scale. 

If the many posts on groups for transitioning teachers provide any indication, former educators face a particular kind of bias in the corporate world. 

They are told to revamp their resumes to downplay language related to education: don’t say “students”, say “clients”; don’t say “teacher”, say “manager”; don’t say “lesson plans”, say “project plans”, and so on.

This advice sounds disingenuous to me. If we have been teachers, how can we represent ourselves otherwise? That’s dishonest. 

However, some say that teachers have to, or corporate America (and the bots they use to screen applicants) will eliminate an application before a human even looks at it.

Then if the application and resume even makes it past that hurdle, those hiring still have a patronizing and inaccurate impression of educators and their skill sets. 

Interestingly, those employers who have given previous teachers positions as project managers, trainers, and so on, seem quite pleased with their performance. 

So where is the disconnect? 

Perhaps many recruiters simply do not realize what educators bring with them.

In the mid-sized high school where I teach, these are examples of skills implemented by educators on a routine basis:

1.The teacher of higher-level math classes also acts as the liaison between the local community college and students in dual-credit classes, organizes academic meets involving dozens of staff members and hundreds of students, and plans and submits budgets for those programs.

2.The coach teaches history and geography classes and handles his athletic coaching responsibilities while also coaching extemporaneous speakers, and still maintains a high teaching standard in his classroom.

3. The theater teacher raises money for, directs, and brings to fruition two large productions (one for competition) every academic year, while also teaching theater classes and mentoring the junior high program.

4. The special-ed teacher plans (and finds funds for) hands-on activities that help students learn life skills and interact with regular-ed students and the public, all while following detailed educational plans to satisfy the requirements of state and federal law.

5. The regular-ed classroom teacher leads her science department, mentors other teachers in her field, and wins student respect and trust through her excellent and consistent teaching style, preparing her students for success in post-secondary education and careers. 

I could go on and on, just thinking of individual educators in my small circle. Keep in mind all these folks have bachelor’s degrees, and many advanced degrees as well, and years of experience communicating, prioritizing, managing, and implementing their assigned responsibilities. 

Yet, these same educators would likely encounter bias and skepticism in the “real world”. I would challenge corporate employers to step into our “real world” and see how they do! 

Believe me, nothing is more realistic than teaching in the current cultural and political climate!

Give us a chance, y’all!

If you would like to see more articles on education, culture, and personal well-being, please connect to and support my writing. 

© 2024 Joyce Martin. All rights reserved

Note: None of my content is AI generated. Ever.

Thank you for reading! Please subscribe below!

You may also find my writing on Joyce Martin on Medium

You may tip my writing at: https://buymeacoffee.com/joycemartin

Substack link: joyous461.substack.com

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Also, why I may not teach much longer…

Pristine stacks of fresh paper, ample supplies of pens and pencils, and books unexplored all suggest days of learning and discovery to come. Now we also have shiny keyboards, glistening computer screens, calculators, and a dazzling array of modern communication tools. The delicious anticipation is the same.  

As a child, I always loved school and the worlds hidden in books and the mysteries within words. Before I could understand sentences, I puzzled over words. Before I could decipher words, I admired the curves and strokes of letters.  

I was convinced at an early age, by some sweet collision of environment and inborn belief, that within language live the secrets of knowledge and humanity. I became a devourer of words.  

Now I am a teacher, still learning and searching, on my quest for an elusive holy grail of knowledge.  

While our courts and legislature debate the purpose, financing, and structure of public education, those of us within the current system continue with the daily business of learning and teaching. Valid concerns about funding, class sizes, testing, and curriculum abound, but I have felt compelled to step back and consider what education is and should be, and where we are in that larger analysis.  

To do that, we must understand how America’s schools got their start.

The United States Constitution did not specifically address education; the education of children fell to private citizens and the states. Texas enacted its first public school law in 1840, with many modifications since.  

Traditionally, the federal government has become involved only when education affects individual rights, as in the desegregation ruling of Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, in 1954, or the passage of Title IX in 1972, designed to end sex discrimination in education. A conglomeration of local, state, and federal court rulings and laws have developed into a huge and entrenched public school system.

It wasn’t always so complicated.

Schools in the 1800’s often served the local needs of the people, designed to provide students with the education to function well as adults within that community; a one-room school house in a remote agricultural area might emphasize different content than a larger one in a more urban, industrialized area. Technological developments of the 20th and 21st centuries have transformed the world, and as a result, education. The capabilities of mass communication and a more mobile population have had a leveling effect on the needs of students in different locales.  

An adequate education now demands consistency and relevancy in all parts of the country. Both the child in Kansas and the one in Los Angeles need to acquire computer literacy, basic mathematical and scientific concepts, and world and national history. But without the ability to interpret and analyze all the information now available, it serves no purpose.

Can the education of children only be addressed in the traditional model of public or private school? Perhaps we confine education too much within the walls of those institutions instead of also valuing the experience of living, working, and coping within the broader world.   

When my classroom hums with activity, when students prod and argue while finishing a project, or when papers rustle quietly as they confront a written task, we are learning, and school is what it should be. Education is no less evident when young people organize a fundraiser, deliver meals to the elderly, or face the challenges of a first job.

Operating from the premise that human nature has not fundamentally changed over time, and from my own experience, I believe some other platitudes still hold true:

Everyone learns better in a safe environment. Life is not fair all the time in every case, but integrity has its own reward. We learn by doing. Kids are people too. We don’t teach subjects; we teach children.  

If we hold to these underlying principles, we can free our children to think for themselves, to be literate, and to treat others with kindness. They will have the tools to live and live well in this complex and sometimes baffling world. Education is the right hand of liberty, but it demands constant exercise to retain its strength.

When I step back from the day to day flurry on my desk, computer screen, and smart board to look at the children, I realize why I am still here. The stuff of education may change, but the underlying principles do not.  

When a 13 year old realizes that she can write, and that her thoughts are worth keeping, her smile can outshine the sun. When a visiting graduate stops in for a hug and update on his new life as an adult, the warmth lasts for a week. When a little one grabs me around the knees on the playground and gives me a playful greeting, I see the promise of what she will become in her eyes.  

We are not preparing them for life; they are teaching us to live.  

I am a confessed bibliophile, but I am beginning to realize that the essence of knowledge is beyond words. I will continue my search for a holy grail, but it is the children who have my loyalty and dedication. Maybe I already have what is most precious and worthwhile right here. 

Note: I wrote much of this piece quite a few years ago. On a good day, I still feel that teaching in public education is worth the struggle. However, in recent years I am more often exhausted by playing a game with the cards stacked against us. Students will not win until we all–parents, educators, and policy-makers, play on the same team.

© 2024 Joyce Martin. All rights reserved

Note: None of my content is AI generated. Ever.

Thank you for reading! Please subscribe below!

You may also find my writing on joyous Road on Substack & Joyce Martin on Medium

If you would like to support my writing, please do so here: https://buymeacoffee.com/joycemartin

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