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Teachers In Migrant Camps Reveal Just How Much Public Schools Have Become Foster Care
The Federalist ^ | April 5, 2021 | Auguste Meyrat

Posted on 04/05/2021 8:15:04 AM PDT by Kaslin

It was only a matter of time before the government would enlist teachers to work in the migrant shelters sprouting up due to the crisis at the border.


When people accuse me of being a glorified babysitter because I’m a teacher, I usually laugh and respond, “Who said anything about being glorified?” During the COVID-19 lockdowns, I can now add, “Who said anything about being a babysitter?”

These days, teachers in many parts of the country are paid for doing next to nothing since reopening schools would expose them to the virus. For teachers who have returned to the classroom, much of their work has moved online and many don’t see students in person, or see them in person often.

Given this situation, particularly in states that have kept public schools closed, it was only a matter of time before the government would enlist teachers to work in the migrant shelters sprouting up due to the crisis at the border.

It was recently reported that teachers from San Diego Unified School District were asked to work with migrant children housed in the San Diego Convention Center. Because SDUSD has yet to open their schools — all their instruction has been virtual this year — this apparently leaves some teachers free to provide in-person instruction to minors who crossed the border illegally.

Naturally, residents of San Diego are outraged at this double-standard. While their children languish at home staring at a screen, children in migrant shelters have a physically present teacher. Simply responding that “all children in California, regardless of immigration status, have a constitutional right to education” doesn’t excuse this. One group of kids is receiving real instruction from a real person, and another group of kids is stuck with a cheap digital facsimile disconnected from reality.

Then again, it’s fair to ask if the teacher recruits from SDUSD are providing an actual education in the sense of taking attendance, presenting lessons, and grading assignments, or if they are mostly herding groups of young people from one place to another and dispensing basic living necessities. In other words, are they primarily teachers or social workers?

If they’re teachers, and what they’re doing with migrant children is the same as what they would do with Californian children, then the standards for what passes as education are probably quite low (and, judging from California’s test scores, they are). If they’re social workers, and they are providing food and toiletries to needy children, then it makes no sense to have teachers do this instead of trained social workers.

For decades now, what public school teachers actually do has been an open question. Are they educators, entertainers, or activists? Are they policemen, counselors, or prison wardens? Are they guardians of the culture, diversity coaches, or data analysts? Are they all of these? Is there a hierarchy of roles, and if so, are some of these roles incompatible with one another? How much, if any, do these “roles” depend on the individual teacher?

The question has never really been answered. Each year as teachers complete their in-service training, their presumed roles will be different (depending on what needs a district might have or what educational gimmick is popular that year). By continually cycling through so many roles, however, it becomes unclear what it even means to be a teacher. In most cases, trying to be everything results in becoming nothing.

When school districts started shutting down because of COVID-19, this problem of defining a teacher became significant. It allowed teachers to receive a paycheck for doing invisible work that helped just about no one. If any parent complained that teachers were not working, teachers could reply that, by their own standards, they were “working.” After all, most parents went along with this logic before. And shouldn’t they trust teachers and schools more during a pandemic?

This is why it’s not enough to demand schools reopen and teachers go back to work. “Reopening” and “going back to work” mean different things to different people. For most parents, it means life will go back to normal, and they imagine school back in the days when they were students. It never occurs to them that their experience of school has long since passed away and that public education has changed significantly in the past decade, and even more so in the past year.

These days, because health concerns have overruled every other concern, teachers are primarily enforcers of social distancing, masking, and quarantining — and soon, vaccinations. Their main concern is to keep the kids apart while they do busywork for the day. Instruction, assessments, and even mental health are either secondary or nonexistent. For most campuses, this year has been “survival mode.”

One can imagine just how fun it is to work in such an environment. Speaking as a teacher, it doesn’t surprise me that some teachers in San Diego are willing to work with migrant children. If I were kept at home, unable to meet students in person, and forced to use some clumsy platform to “teach” my classes, I would jump at the chance to do something that at least felt somewhat real and fulfilling.

Unfortunately, there’s little reason to expect things will change for the next year. So long as the Biden administration and public health entities continue to push restrictions and excessive caution, and most Americans appear to accept these pronouncements, most public school districts will continue to comply. That means maintaining social distancing, masking, paperless instruction, and virtual classes — basically another year of “survival mode.”

To see any genuine change, average Americans — especially parents — need to reject the bogus narratives about the virus, demand more from their educators and administrations, and be clear about what they want from public schools. When people take schools for granted and assume the best, they shouldn’t be surprised when district leaders and teachers unions exploit them and their children. Once people finally decide what they want from teachers, they will finally have what they want for their students.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: aliens; bordercrisis; covid19; distancelearning; education; k12; migrantchildren; publicschools; reopeningschools; reopenschools; schoolreopening; schoolteachers; teachers; teachersunions; unaccompaniedminors; unions

1 posted on 04/05/2021 8:15:05 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Teachers are worse than social workers. They are social activists and racialists.


2 posted on 04/05/2021 8:22:12 AM PDT by ecomcon
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To: Kaslin

Parents who truly hate their children send them to Public “Schools”.


3 posted on 04/05/2021 8:25:48 AM PDT by Navy Patriot (Celebrate Decivilization)
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To: Kaslin

“To see any genuine change, average Americans — especially parents — need to reject the bogus narratives about the virus, demand more from their educators and administrations, and be clear about what they want from public schools. When people take schools for granted and assume the best, they shouldn’t be surprised when district leaders and teachers unions exploit them and their children. Once people finally decide what they want from teachers, they will finally have what they want for their students.”

There are a couple of issues here in my area (NJ): The teachers’ unions control the politicians, and an increasing share of the student bodies are foreign (and often not children of taxpayers). American homeowners were already footing the bill for trafficked foreign students, and now they aren’t even paying for the babysitting services. As long as public education isn’t fixed (teaching instead of babysitting), employers will complain they need foreign workers because the products of American public schools are unemployable.


4 posted on 04/05/2021 8:26:30 AM PDT by kearnyirish2 (Affirmative action is economic warfare against white males (and therefore white families).)
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To: Kaslin
the standards for what passes as education are probably quite low (and, judging from California’s test scores, they are)

The only Education Standards in California are as follows:

You Showed up, You have a Pulse, NOTHING else is required to satisfy the Daily Attendance Record Reporting Requirements to get PAID!!
5 posted on 04/05/2021 8:26:48 AM PDT by eyeamok (founded in cynicism, wrapped in sarcasm)
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To: Kaslin

I wonder how many of those kids can read at the third grade level....in Spanish. How many of them do not speak Spanish but speak one of the Central American indigenous languages that are only spoken because they do not have written language? Most people in Mexico consider Hondurans, Guatemalans, and Salvadorans as backward and dangerous people.


6 posted on 04/05/2021 8:27:01 AM PDT by forgotten man
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To: ecomcon

Yes, and they are also community organizers and antifa members who get arrested in Portland, get their bails paid and generally do anything but teach reading, writing, history and science. Parents are supposed to do that.


7 posted on 04/05/2021 8:27:56 AM PDT by doc maverick
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To: Kaslin

It allowed teachers to receive a paycheck for doing invisible work.

Look for the union label


8 posted on 04/05/2021 9:05:38 AM PDT by Vaduz (women and children to be impacIQ of chimpsted the most.)
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To: Kaslin

“When people accuse me of being a glorified babysitter because I’m a teacher, I usually laugh and respond, “Who said anything about being glorified?”


I taught public middle school/jr high for 29 years at our local school. My class sizes ranged from 20 (very small) to 42 (the largest). I found my parents showed new respect for what I did after hosting a 4-hour party for maybe ten of their son’s or daughter’s friends.


9 posted on 04/05/2021 11:40:48 AM PDT by hanamizu
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To: ecomcon

Bernie Sanders got his start as a social worker. It’s a major power base for the herdcore Left.


10 posted on 04/05/2021 11:53:59 AM PDT by bIlluminati (Demonetize the Left. Buy nothing from them. Sell nothing to them. Shun them.)
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