The Wages of Teaching
By Anna Quindlen
Newsweek
Copyright (c) 2005 by Anna Quindlen.
(This column first appeared in the November 28, 2005, issue of Newsweek
magazine. It is reprinted here with permission.)
A couple of years ago I spent the day at an elementary school in New
Jersey. It was a nice average school, a square and solid building with
that patented classroom aroma of disinfectant and chalk, chock-full
of reasonably well-behaved kids from middle-class families. I handled
three classes, and by the time I staggered out the door I wanted to
lie down for the rest of the day.
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Anna Quindlen |
Teaching's the toughest job there is. In his new memoir, "Teacher
Man,"
Frank McCourt recalls telling his students, "Teaching is harder
than working on docks and warehouses." Not to mention writing a
column. I can stare off into the middle distance with my chin in my
hand any time. But you go mentally south for five minutes in front of
a class of fifth graders, and you are sunk.
The average new teacher today makes just under $30,000 a year, which
may not look too bad for a twentysomething with no mortgage and no kids.
But soon enough the newbies realize that they can make more money and
not work anywhere near as hard elsewhere. After a lifetime of hearing
the old legends about cushy hours and summer vacations, they figure
out that early mornings are for students who need extra help, evenings
are for test corrections and lesson plans, and weekends and summers
are for second and even third jobs to try to pay the bills.
According to the Department of Education, one in every five teachers
leaves after the first year, and almost twice as many leave within three.
If any business had that rate of turnover, someone would do something
smart and strategic to fix it. This isn't any business. It's the most
important business around, the gardeners of the landscape of the human
race.
Unfortunately, the current fashionable fixes for education take a page
directly from the business playbook, and it's a terrible fit. Instead
of simply acknowledging that starting salaries are woefully low and
committing to increasing them and finding the money for reasonable recurring
raises, pols have wasted decades obsessing about something called merit
pay. It's a concept that works fine if you're making widgets, but kids
aren't widgets, and good teaching isn't an assembly line.
McCourt's book is instructive. Early in his 30-year career, he's teaching
at a vocational high school and realizes that his English students are
never more inspired than when forging excuse notes from their parents.
So McCourt assigns the class to write excuse notes, the results ranging
"from a family epidemic of diarrhea to a 16-wheeler truck crashing
into the house." Pens fly with extravagant lies. You can almost
feel the imaginations kick in.
The point about tying teaching salaries to widget standards is that
it's hard to figure out a useful way to measure the merit of what a
really good teacher does. You can imagine the principal who would see
McCourt's gambit as the work of a gifted teacher, and just as easily
imagine the one who would find it unseemly. Tying raises to pass rates
is a flagrant invitation to inflate student achievement. Tying them
to standardized tests makes rote regurgitation the centerpiece of schools.
Both are blind to the merit of teachers who shoulder the challenging
work of educating those less able, more troubled, from homes where there
are no pencils, no books, even no parents. A teacher whose Advanced
Placement class sends everyone on to top-tier colleges; a teacher whose
remedial-reading class finally gets through to some, but not all, of
a student group that is failing. There is merit in both.
The National Education Association has been pushing for a minimum starting
salary of $40,000 for all teachers. Why not? If these people can teach
6-year-olds to add and get adolescents to attend to algebra, surely
we can do the math to get them a decent wage. Since the corporate world
is the greatest, and richest, beneficiary of well-educated workers,
maybe a national brain trust might be set up that would turn a tax on
corporate profits into an endowment to raise teacher salaries.
Maybe states and communities could also pass regulations with this
simple proviso: no school administrator should ever receive a percentage
raise greater than the raise teachers get. Neither should state legislators.
In recent years teacher salaries have grown, if they've grown at all,
at a far slower rate than those of other professionals, often lagging
behind inflation. Yet teachers should have the most powerful group of
advocates in the nation: not their union, but we the people, their former
students. I am a writer because of the encouragement of teachers.
Surely most Americans must feel the same, that there were women and
men who helped them levitate just a little above the commonplace expectations
they had for themselves.
At the end of his book McCourt, who is preparing to leave teaching
with the idea of living off his pension and maybe writing – and
whose maiden effort, "Angela's Ashes," will win the Pulitzer
– is giving advice to a young substitute. "You'll never know
what you've done to, or for, the hundreds coming and going," he
says. Yeah, but the hundreds know, the hundreds who are millions who
are us. They made us. We owe them.
(c) 2005 Newsweek, Inc.
(c) 2005 MSNBC.com
Posted December 6, 2005