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Are the Right People Becoming Teachers? ( Teachers are NOT Professionals)
EdNews.org ^ | January 9,2007 | Martin Haberman

Posted on 01/30/2007 5:45:59 AM PST by wintertime

(snip)

1. The practitioners know and can do things the public in general cannot do. They have a specialized body of knowledge.

2. The specialized body of knowledge practitioners have takes an extended period of time to learn.

3. The educators who prepare the practitioners are experts who agree upon the specialized body of knowledge practitioners must have.

4. Admission to a professional training program is highly selective.( snip).

6. Only members of the profession set the standards for licensure and certification.

7. The primary responsibility and loyalty of a professional is to serve the client and not simply the institution or governmental agency in which the practitioner may be employed.

8. Neither the public at large nor an employing institution may control the way in which professionals relate to their clients, or the treatments, methods or procedures they use.

9. Neither the public at large nor an employing institution may set the purpose, goals or objectives for the practitioner’s practice with clients.

10. The public at large does not decide how to evaluate professionals.

11. Only members of the profession can determine malpractice and dismiss or disbar practitioners.

12. Professionals determine the cost of their services.

19. Professionals are trained to serve clients with problems. By definition “professionals” do not seek to perform services to clients without problems.

21. Professionals share a code of ethics to which they commit and adhere. They cannot be directed to perform or not perform services for clients which conflict with their professional code.

The case that teaching does not meet any of these twenty one criteria can be readily made.

(Excerpt) Read more at ednews.org ...


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: homeschool; school
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To: Scotswife

Ah, so you're a spouse that sees how hard your teacher works and has ignoramouses always talking about how unintelligent and lazy teachers are, too? It's enough to make you want to scream, isn't it? We see bad teachers too, so it isn't that we are blind to the bad-teacher component of the education problem. But they do not represent the majority. And they just make my husband's job all the harder. Teachers deserve a lot of respect. Given what I read far too often on FR, it's no wonder that the little darlings in the classroom don't respect their teachers, making it all the harder for them to do their job.


81 posted on 01/30/2007 7:11:03 AM PST by twigs
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To: Sender

My wife is a former teacher and now a principal. Many of those she has worked with and now has working for her are as you describe.

The teaching profession and teachers unions are essentially the new craft guild. Seeking to keep out of the profession those who they consider undesireables (conservitives).

Now as an administrator my wife thinks that tenure needs to be history as she has been saddled with incompetent to unwilling teachers from the previous administration. They have tenure, and it's hard to to get tid of them, but not impossible.

I told my wife that she needs to domument everything, and when the move to 30.20A dismissal action that they don't lose.

I spent 10 years in the IUE-AFL-CIO as a Shop Steward and Chief Steward. I have helped my wife in dealing with the union and have had the school district insert into the contract this language "the school administration retains exclusive right to manage its business".

After 15 years out of the union, let me tell you I will never join another one nor will I work where there is a union.


82 posted on 01/30/2007 7:11:20 AM PST by Ouderkirk (Don't you think it's interesting how death and destruction seems to happen wherever Muslims gather.)
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To: AmishDude

Absolutely. I get a class-full of 1st year University students, and about 5 out of 60 will have written a complete, researched term paper. Little wonder that they then grab stuff off the internet and plagiarize. I have to give very clear directions and expectations. But by the end of that first year they have learned either to research and write well or to fake it. My daughter had a teacher in Gr. 11 who had them write a paper a week... just short, but one a week. She worked hard, and she worked them hard, and the results were clear for my daughter.


83 posted on 01/30/2007 7:12:50 AM PST by Thywillnotmine (take the wings of the morning)
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To: Young Scholar; HIDEK6; NonValueAdded

Should have included you in my comment...

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1776041/posts?page=73#73


84 posted on 01/30/2007 7:13:25 AM PST by the OlLine Rebel (Common sense is an uncommon virtue.)
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To: Hemingway's Ghost
Baltimore is a scary place. I was on a business trip to Philadelphia a couple years ago when she was still in school, and I decided to extend the trip and go down to Baltimore to visit. The Johns Hopkins campus is beautiful, and the surrounding neighborhood is pretty nice. However, while my sister had class, I decided to go sightseeing. I still remember it vividly. The only place I've seen that's worse is Detroit. Much like Detroit, part of what's depressing is that you can tell these were beautiful neighborhoods at one point. Now they're just blocks and blocks of boarded up houses.

She just graduated a year and a half ago and entered into a program that the City of Baltimore has to encourage recent college grads to work as teachers, even without certification. It's similar to the Teach for America program, but exclusively for Baltimore. She only has half a year left in her two year obligation, and plans to sign on for at least on more year, but she's already finding it extremely difficult and isn't sure how much longer she can hold out.
85 posted on 01/30/2007 7:13:44 AM PST by MinnesotaLibertarian
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To: nanster

Not really, I am woefully undereducated compared to my lucky foreign or private-school educated colleagues. I manage to make it through on sheer tenacity.


86 posted on 01/30/2007 7:13:54 AM PST by AmishDude (It doesn't matter whom you vote for. It matters who takes office.)
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To: MinnesotaLibertarian
And I find your sanctimony appalling. She can go start a school that works tomorrow, or work for one that does (in Baltimore, the catholic schools are great, and will take anyone).

As for paid very badly, in Baltimore a teacher just starting with only a BA makes 36k, 5 years in 40k. A teacher with 10 years experience and an MA makes over 50k. It goes up 1k a year of experience after that, plus cost of living adjustments. Coaches or department heads make an extra 3-4k. The work year is 10 months.

87 posted on 01/30/2007 7:14:08 AM PST by JasonC
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To: pikachu
...a young man with a state allowed modification of lesson plan that allows him to masturbate one per day in class.

Okay, now I have officially heard everything!

==8^O

88 posted on 01/30/2007 7:16:03 AM PST by Nea Wood
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To: the OlLine Rebel
A "real" engineer (according to the author's definition of a professional) isn't just someone who successfully completes four years of college . . . it would require the person to become formally licensed through his state board of professional engineers.

Getting through engineering school is one thing -- but it's hard to pass those P.E. exams if you slack off all the way through!

89 posted on 01/30/2007 7:16:19 AM PST by Alberta's Child (Can money pay for all the days I lived awake but half asleep?)
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To: AmishDude

Agreed. Basic military requires at most 6 mos. of "training".

Go up to the highest pinnacle, and maybe it would be a true "profession" (besides perhaps the officer's corps).


90 posted on 01/30/2007 7:16:38 AM PST by the OlLine Rebel (Common sense is an uncommon virtue.)
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To: nanster

Yes, I know that. But that is superficial, at best. No one can be 'developed' in 4 years -- or in 8 years of school. In Canada, a new engineer is 'mentored' for a period of time. I don't think the system is as productive as it could be, but it is in the right direction. Many young engineering students do their studies as 'co-op', whereby they intersperse classroom study with job placings. It prolongs the time that they are officially students, but it greatly increases their scope and on-the-job training.


91 posted on 01/30/2007 7:16:53 AM PST by Thywillnotmine (take the wings of the morning)
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To: twigs

"Ah, so you're a spouse that sees how hard your teacher works and has ignoramouses always talking about how unintelligent and lazy teachers are, too? "

You got it!!
And let me guess...might you be the spouse who hears her husband complain that since he is a male in a female dominated industry - he gets the honor of having "extra" duties?
are his classes strangely loaded with troubled boys as compared to his female counterparts?
Is he paid more for taking on these responsibilities?

"We see bad teachers too, so it isn't that we are blind to the bad-teacher component of the education problem. But they do not represent the majority."

It's like anything else. No one gets noticed for doing their job - for doing what they're supposed to do.
The ones that get all the attention are the pitiful incompetents - and when they're bad, they're REALLY bad.

"Given what I read far too often on FR, it's no wonder that the little darlings in the classroom don't respect their teachers, making it all the harder for them to do their job."

Yes. My hubby gets "talked down to" quite a bit by non-educators who know better.
They let him know how he should really be doing his job.
These folks don't work with children. They cruise the internet and think they know everything because they've read articles.
Of course - these folks are strangely absent during school board meetings, and even don't show up to vote during budget time.


92 posted on 01/30/2007 7:17:23 AM PST by Scotswife
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To: AmishDude

My cap is off to you...


93 posted on 01/30/2007 7:18:44 AM PST by Thywillnotmine (take the wings of the morning)
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To: ContemptofCourt

A properly written IEP delineates the needs of the child and some of the parents wishes. Some parents don't care, others want everything possible that can be done, will be done.


94 posted on 01/30/2007 7:18:46 AM PST by Ouderkirk (Don't you think it's interesting how death and destruction seems to happen wherever Muslims gather.)
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To: Alberta's Child

Noone cares about that much. If they did, everyone would be required to get at least an EIT nevermind a PE. But, millions of jobs exist for the "unprofessionals". There is no legal or even academic requirement for it (thank God - yet).

The PE stuff is icing and truth is, a tiny % of jobs actually require it. More ask for MS or PhD than ask for "PE".


95 posted on 01/30/2007 7:19:06 AM PST by the OlLine Rebel (Common sense is an uncommon virtue.)
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To: WV Mountain Mama

You have got to be kidding! What medical condition could this be?


96 posted on 01/30/2007 7:19:53 AM PST by Thywillnotmine (take the wings of the morning)
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To: MinnesotaLibertarian

like every other profession there are good and bad. i know quite a few *very* good lawyers, yet lawyers get ripped on more than teachers.
up here, teachers are selfish and more interested in the pay than in teaching. come check out the school district up here where 98% of teachers voted against a proposition that would make them pay for 4% of their health benefits. they currently pay nothing. they're already facing a deficit, and can't afford to pay for all the supplies they need, but aren't willing to sacrifice anything.

nothing against your sister, or any of the other good teachers out there, but more often than not, teachers aren't worth much. have you ever asked your sister how many of her collegues she thinks are worth anything?


97 posted on 01/30/2007 7:20:10 AM PST by absolootezer0 (stop repeat offenders - don't re-elect them!)
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To: WV Mountain Mama
The idea of tying academics to financial incentives, food stamps and welfare, is a good one. I think middle class parents who show complete disregard for the academic performance of their kids should be forced to pay tuition.

Parents who tell you their kids lie about home work may be sending their kids the massage that if they have homework they are in trouble. I would be suspicious of any teacher who did not hand out homework.
98 posted on 01/30/2007 7:23:15 AM PST by perseid 67
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To: WV Mountain Mama
"People always complain about teachers, but most of them are hard working people who would move Heaven and Earth to help their students."

I personally think this is BS. If MOST of them cared about the kids they would disband the unions. But the reality is that MOST care about the unions more than the kids, so the minority of caring teachers is powerless.

If MOST of them cared, they would rally against step pay increases for administrators who make 300k a year because they earned there "doctorate" and are now accountants in some bureaucratic nightmare.

If MOST cared, they would stomp their feet, write letters to newspapers and say "hey, we don't have enough money for crayons, but our admins make CEO pay".

If MOST cared they would proclaim "I don't want health and dental for my kids till they are 28 (providing they are in college), I want the kids in my class to have a few extra bucks spent on chemistry"

If MOST cared, they would stop refusing contract talks until AFTER the tax referendums.

If MOST cared, they would stop going on strike for 3 extra days off a year.

If MOST cared, we wouldn't see bumper stickers that say "The best 3 things about teaching: June July August"

I do believe that there are teachers who care, but they are minority. The rest of the teachers are bureaucrats who couldn't make it in politics, so they settled for teaching. I think MOST teachers are folks who don't have the stomach for Cuba, but think Socialism is utopia, and teaching is the closest they will ever come to it.

I think MOST teachers consider kids fodder for the cannons of their own retirement.

I think MOST teachers couldn't make it in a real job where they would be held accountable for their achievements.

I think MOST teachers are dem lackeys, who are more concerned on polling day "they man the polling stations here on election day" than they are with the job of teaching our kids.

Then again, I'm from Chicago, and things may be different elsewhere, but I have never seen a more ignorant, liberal, uneducated, uncaring, political, graff-rewarded, organized group of people in my life.

I have had teachers here "AXE me a question". I have had them talk about AMBLANCES, and the PO-LEASSS. I have heard that the NCLB is racist.

The teachers union is a democratic institution and if MOST teachers cared as you say, then the union would fold. PERIOD. But it exists, and it is the strongest lobby in the United States.

Until that changes, I think public skool teachers are part of the problem, NOT part of the solution.

The day I see teachers strike because they don't get to work enough hours to or weeks to teach Johnny, or the day they go on strike to complain about how the admins eat up all the classroom funds, or the day they go on strike to complain that their union funds the dems, is the day I may think otherwise. Until then, MOST teachers can kiss my grits.

/rant off
99 posted on 01/30/2007 7:26:23 AM PST by esoxmagnum
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To: Scotswife

I'm sure you have it much worse than we do. My husband teaches college, but a lot of the issues are the same. He eats lunch with other teachers who left public school to teach college (which in our area is a significant pay cut) because they couldn't handle the situation there any more. There are changes going on (under the radar for the most part) in higher education that public education has been forced to reject because of parental demand, at least here in the state of PA. My only daughter is graduating from college this year. If I had children coming through the system, I would seriously rethink their higher ed options...

And believe it or not, the gender issues are here too. Men are more prevalent, but women are on a faster track to the top and neither good male teachers nor students are always beneficiaries of the new trend.


100 posted on 01/30/2007 7:28:42 AM PST by twigs
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