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FIRST PERSON - A REAL EDUCATION: When a Reporter Becomes a Teacher, She Learns Something
Columbia Jounralism Review ^ | March/April Edition 2002 | Christina Asquith

Posted on 04/27/2002 11:39:08 AM PDT by summer

FIRST PERSON - A REAL EDUCATION:

When a Reporter Becomes a Teacher, She Learns Something


BY CHRISTINA ASQUITH


Ms. Asquith's 6th Grade Class, Philadelphia, PA.

One sunny July morning in 1999, on a whim, I called the Philadelphia School district and made an appointment with a recruiter. I thought of myself as a reporter, but I was looking for a job. Like many cities suffering from a teacher shortage, Philadelphia still needed 1,200 teachers and was taking almost anyone with a college degree. I had written hundreds of stories about education and always harbored an interest in teaching. Still, I'd never considered actually doing it, until then. "We need you more than you need us," the recruiter said. He gave me a folder of paperwork including a background check for the state police, and there wasn't much more involved.

I had mixed feelings. My colleagues at The Philadelphia Inquirer -- we were finishing a two-year reporting program there -- were heading to staff positions at papers like the Orlando Sentinel and the Raleigh News & Observer. I didn't want to throw away the journalism career I'd worked hard for since my college newspaper days. I'd interned unpaid through college and reported for a year from Chile, primarily for AP/Dow Jones. When I returned, the Inquirer hired me as one of its "two-year correspondents" to cover southern Chester County, Pennsylvania, a beat that included three school districts, twenty-seven townships, and a mushroom industry that employed 10,000 Mexican immigrants. I gravitated to school stories out of interest and a sense that they were important. From my suburban outpost, I made page one occasionally by regionalizing a story on subjects like revolving-door principals or questionable strategies to raise test scores. But I always felt uncertain about my stories about schools, as though I were guessing at what was really happening inside them.

When the two years ended, I interviewed for a staff position on the Inquirer's city education desk, but the beat went to an education reporter with a decade of experience. Meanwhile, my affection for newspapers was waning; there had been a lot of deflating news about corporate ownership and declining circulation. At age twenty-five, I was already questioning if newspaper journalism could be the vehicle for change I wanted it to be. I was eager to make a difference.

So, when I saw the article about the teacher shortage I got excited. If I taught for a year I would be able to see the real issues firsthand. I could have an effect on education in a way I wasn't having with journalism. And I wasn't throwing away my career, I reasoned, because if I wanted to come back to newspapers, I would be an even stronger education reporter. I decided to do it. Six weeks later, I stepped into my story.

My school was Julia de Burgos Bilingual Middle Magnet School, a 100-year-old stone building in The Badlands, the nickname for a heroin-ravaged Puerto Rican neighborhood in North Philadelphia. City test scores ranked it as the worst middle school in the city. At my first teachers' meeting in September, the new principal, Jayne Gibbs, warned us, "We can't fail any special-education students this year because the government is breathing down our neck." As the teachers nodded and murmured, I sheepishly glanced around. I needed to remind myself that I wasn't a reporter sneaking into a meeting. Other teachers were talking openly to me, without that guarded, clipped manner that I was accustomed to. To them, I was Ms. Asquith, a sixth grade bilingual teacher, with a classroom of forty desks, two blackboards, bars over the windows, and a scenic view of the boiler room roof.

My sixth graders ranged in age from ten to fourteen, and were mostly first- or second-generation Puerto Ricans. Half the class spoke little or no English. The first week, the school was still missing another sixth grade teacher so I got two classes. They shuffled in carrying composition notebooks and wearing puffy jackets, tapered jeans, and Timberland boots. They called me "miss," and were shy, obedient, and eager to please. They wanted stickers for their notebooks and to read the Harry Potter books. A couple of boys wore gangster-style skullcaps and looked tough, but beyond appearances, they were not the drug-dealing street-toughs fitting my stereotype.

My journalistic interests were immediately eclipsed by the reality and enormity of teaching. I had Jose, a thirteen-year old boy from the Dominican Republic, who spoke mostly Spanish and had been left back twice already; Darnell, a mentally troubled boy who jumped out of his seat constantly; and Evelyn, a diligent, articulate eleven-year old who aspired to be a doctor. I didn't know how to teach a lesson, let alone how to teach a class with such a range in abilities.

The school didn't help. When I asked the vice principal for a curriculum, I was promised one that never appeared. By the fourth week, I was finally given a set of grammar textbooks and a set of social studies textbooks, but they were too difficult for my English-as-a-second-language students. I had to invent everything myself. When the Philadelphia Daily News ran a story in October reporting that 100 new teachers across the city had quit, complaining of lack of support and supplies, I understood. For the first few months, each day felt like a churning, eight-hour tempest. I invented lame writing assignments -- "What would you do with a million dollars?" -- and read Chicken Soup for the Kid's Soul. Several of the administrators were also new, and just as overburdened by the remaining seven teacher vacancies. Whether and what I taught were secondary concerns to them. So I used my journalism skills, asked a lot of questions of other teachers, and wrote everything down. A significant handful of teachers were so incompetent that it was dangerous. They screamed at the students all day and created a climate of fear, abuse, and violence. But by November, I was finally picking up enough tricks and materials from the good ones to put together a semblance of a daily lesson. I got by with the help of my nicer colleagues, who amazed me with their ingenuity. In my class, instead of the typical reading and writing assignments we read newspaper and magazine articles, and wrote letters to the editor. The Daily News printed a short letter from one of my most easily discouraged students. Seeing his face light up pushed me forward.

At night, after grading and planning, I wrote in a journal all that I was learning in my new world. Details I had never focused on as a journalist fascinated me, such as who kept student attendance and how easy it was to fudge upwards. Schools get higher ratings and award money from the state for high attendance, and as a teacher I saw how attendance could fluctuate depending on what time it's taken, whether suspended students are considered absent, and whether a school counts excused absences in its total.

And from the inside, I could see how some education stories really miss the mark. For example, in late winter the school board announced plans to spend millions of dollars on a new "discipline school," a place for kids with behavior problems. From an outsider's point of view, that might seem like a good idea. Indeed, our school had about thirty or forty students who needed to be removed. They roamed the hallways, picking fights, threatening teachers with scissors, and destroying the learning environment. These students were often victims of abuse themselves and needed help. But they remained in our school year after year. The problem was not a lack of discipline schools. The fact was that the city's existing discipline schools were half empty. The reason: the stacks and stacks of paperwork required by the city and state to transfer a dangerous student into one of the city's discipline schools. It could take up to eight months to put a transfer through, so few teachers bothered. When the Inquirer wrote a long feature story about the proposed new million-dollar discipline school, the article made only brief mention of the fact that the existing discipline schools were not being used, and no mention at all of the many roadblocks involved in moving a student to a discipline school.

The issues I had worried myself with, as a reporter, suddenly seemed quite esoteric and bureaucratic in comparison to what the students and teachers had to deal with. Most of my sources as a reporter had been administrators, union members, and school board members -- instead of students, parents, and teachers. And yet, much of what the school board dealt with was unrelated to what really happened on the ground. For example, the school board fussed for months over prohibiting social promotion, finally deciding that a failing student could not be passed on, regardless of age. Yet our principal is allowed to change grades, and about failing students she told us, "If you retain them we will have to deal with them again." When I turned in two failing report cards they came back to me with the grades raised.

Journalists' assumptions, I was finding out, can be off the mark. An example of this arose when I was given a $1,200 iMac computer for my classroom. As a reporter, I had written a number of stories involving the effort to put technology in the classroom, and just assumed it was a positive goal. I am now less certain. My class's computer collected dust in the back because one, two, even five computers are not that helpful with thirty-three kids. I always believed that increased funding would help schools, but now I saw how existing money was sometimes misspent. The sad truth was that many teachers used the computers to busy the tough-to-control special-education students so that they wouldn't destroy the school. A reporter is not likely to get that story from just talking to a school board member. What the school really needed was not fancy technology but someone to design a curriculum, coordinate the grades, and order appropriate books.

One morning I saw a thirteen-year-old girl crying in the hallway. The security guard was screaming at her, so I offered to walk her back to her classroom. Her name was Angela, she was mentally disabled, one of some seventy students placed in "special education classes" out of about 700 students in the school. When we reached her classroom I understood why she preferred the hallways. Students were fighting and overturning desks and the substitute teacher was shouting, "they're animals." The ceiling was peeling, and exposed nails stuck up from a piece of wood on the floor. Angela was attacked. When I turned to get help, I saw that the security guard was already there and had just been overpowered. This was not an emergency; this was a typical day for special-education students. Yet here was a kind of story that reporters tend not to find -- the routine and systematic abuse of special-ed students.

Later I learned that Angela's group was one of five special-education classes that would not have a teacher all year. They were bounced from room to room each period. One substitute pushed his desk in front of the door and turned on the TV. Occasionally, a substitute wouldn't show up, and the students were left alone in the room. In the spring, at a school in the same neighborhood, a girl in special education was raped during the school day. The overwhelming reaction at my school was "thank god it didn't happen here." But it easily could have. With no teacher or program, Angela and the other special-education students just ran loose in the hallways, starting fires that nearly torched the school, pushing and hospitalizing a teacher, molesting younger students, getting arrested, and shredding the learning environment for the rest of the students. We were dependent on the school district to find real special-education teachers, but it never sent us any. Much of the time of our special-education teacher was spent on completing paperwork that glossed over such problems. Indeed, when our special-ed program was reviewed by federal auditors in May, the school passed.

Seeing this abuse daily made me feel personally frustrated with the media, which -- while investigating the police and other public departments -- tended to treat the schools as a feature beat. In October, the Daily News wrote its "special report" about new teachers quitting. In the spring, there were stories about a rape and a shooting that occurred at two different schools, and in between there were many stories about contract negotiations and administrative matters. Not much about actual education, its successes or failures. And when something was written about the schools, it often carried the intonation that the students were at fault. After a vice principal was shot during a scuffle in a West Philadelphia school, the Daily News followed up with a cover story: why the schools are stuck with so many bad kids. It was illustrated with a shadowy image of a student lurking in the background. The underlying assumption -- that the students were to blame -- reflected a sentiment popular with many in the school board, teachers union, and the administration -- none of whom want to take responsibility for their failings. But what I experienced as a teacher showed me the opposite. The story should have read: why the kids are stuck with so many bad schools. The ongoing failure of our nation's urban school system is a scandal -- it's hurting millions of children, stealing from taxpayers, and creating violence and desperation that has a ripple effect on all corners of society. And it doesn't have to be that way. It's time for the education desk to shed its reputation as a soft beat, for reporters and editors to take a sharper pencil to the schools.

Having once dealt with deadlines, editors, and the pressure for copy, I feel I have some understanding of the complacency that affects the coverage of education. But I can no longer justify it. Too many reporters think that nothing can be done. They allow the protectors of the status quo to use sensitive issues of race and culture and poverty as a shield against their critics. They feed the sense of hopelessness that is encouraged by bad teachers, self-aggrandizing union leaders, and hapless administrators. All those things affected me, too, when I was a reporter. It took a classroom of them to convince me that the kids really do deserve a chance, and that they won't have one until the news organizations act as if they believe it.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Christina Asquith recently completed a book documenting her year inside Philadelphia's toughest middle school. She lives in New York and can be reached at Clasquith@ aol.com. Students names in this article were changed.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; US: Pennsylvania
KEYWORDS: newteacher; philadelphia; publicschools
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To: summer
I believe you about teachers sending their kids to private schools, but I have a comment to make about their motivations. Some of them might be doing it because they don't want to have their children in their same schools - don't want to worry about favoritism when their own child is one of their students, or to have their children looked on as "teacher's pet." One of my elementary teachers did that with her children, and I don't think it was because she thought our school was bad.

This theory would hold true only in small towns where teachers live in the neighborhoods in which they teach.

81 posted on 04/28/2002 6:48:25 AM PDT by bleudevil
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To: ladyrustic
bump
82 posted on 04/28/2002 7:03:54 AM PDT by Unknown Freeper
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To: dingram
Some teachers enjoy teaching in private schools because usually the kids are better behaved and they can run their classrooms as they see fit. My sister-in-law (MS degree, science and math teacher, used to develop curriculum for Baltimore County when she taught in public school) thoroughly enjoys teaching in her Catholic school even though she makes about one-third less. She said she would never go back to teaching in public schools. There is some deadwood in her school, but these people are easier to get rid of.
83 posted on 04/28/2002 7:20:49 AM PDT by ladylib
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To: bleudevil
Years ago, the principal of our local public elementary school sent his children to the Catholic school right across the street, and at that time, the public school was considered the better of the two.
84 posted on 04/28/2002 7:22:57 AM PDT by ladylib
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To: summer; Artist
Most of my sources as a reporter had been administrators, union members, and school board members -- instead of students, parents, and teachers. And yet, much of what the school board dealt with was unrelated to what really happened on the ground.

DUUUUUUUUUUUH!!!

Oh well, better late than never.

85 posted on 04/28/2002 7:34:29 AM PDT by Aquinasfan
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To: bleudevil
Re your post #81 - Excellent point. Thank you for mentioning it.
86 posted on 04/28/2002 10:03:31 AM PDT by summer
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To: Aquinasfan
Oh well, better late than never.

Yep! :)
87 posted on 04/28/2002 10:05:39 AM PDT by summer
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To: summer
Your welcome, and thanks for the info. You don't have to dig out the rules for the FL teacher of the year, your explanation already answered the questions I had. But thanks for the offer and all your hard work for Jeb and education. Someday he ought to give you a guided tour of the capitol building or an invite to a state dinner. Maybe they should form a green-hair club(in appreciation of grass roots!)
88 posted on 04/28/2002 12:52:24 PM PDT by Diddle E. Squat
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To: Diddle E. Squat
Thanks for your kind words, Diddle E. Squat! :)
89 posted on 04/29/2002 4:04:17 PM PDT by summer
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To: clasquith
Bttt^
90 posted on 06/03/2002 4:07:12 PM PDT by backhoe
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To: backhoe
BUMP IN THE DARK!
91 posted on 06/27/2002 5:45:05 PM PDT by Cool Guy
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To: summer
These schools are now about to be taken over by various other groups, including Edison.

Right. Unfortunately, the Philadelphia media has done little that I can see to explain to parents how incredibly bad a school has to be before it will be given to outside management under the current cautious and slight reform regime. As a result, parents of children in the schools being "turned over" (unfortunately, an exaggeration) to Edison Schools, Inc. are in many cases buying the teachers union line that this is some kind of right wing plot to hurt their kids.

Our kids go to public schools in Lower Merion Township, right across the city line from Philadelphia. In terms of what we talk about on FR, the Lower Merion schools are pretty bad, with extensive sex ed and environmentalist indoctrination nonsense. But in terms of caring about every child, maintaining order, fair grading, and administrative help/intervention for weak teachers, the positive difference on the suburban side of the line is astounding. As this great article explains, a lot of what goes on in Philadelphia schools is pretty close to child abuse. With the right kind of journalism, families in Philadelphia would realize the solution in their hands of switching their kids to one of the many charter schools.

92 posted on 06/27/2002 5:52:13 PM PDT by Steve Eisenberg
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To: summer; clasquith
Stunning!

Thank you clasquith for your report.
Thank you summer for finding and posing this eye-opening report.

93 posted on 06/29/2002 2:19:04 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: summer; clasquith
First, welcome to the fray clasquith. I printed your article and had my wife read it. She's a 5th and 6th grade math teacher, working with kids whose skills are weak and/or have emotional problems in the classroom. She has her hands full. Although her teaching environment is not nearly as severe as depicted in your article, there are some parts that are strikingly similar, especially the lack of support piece. I think she could probably write her own article, but it may not be quite as dramatic as yours.

My wife is retired military and used to the organized, mission oriented ways focusing on positive outcomes that military assignments bring. She has her masters degree in special education and loves to teach. Personally, I don't see how she puts up dealing with the public school system's inane and downright quirky ways. It really must be her labor of love to give those kids something to strive for.

Anyway, thanks for your courage in writing the article and keep up the good fight. Summer, thanks for posting this ;~)

Sua Sponte

TADSLOS

94 posted on 06/29/2002 5:14:35 PM PDT by TADSLOS
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To: summer
Summer, this is a great article. It's time for the public to open their eyes and see what teachers have to put up. It's time for PARENTS to get involved, actually past time, they should have been involved from the first day the child came home from the hospital and instilled discipline and respect in the children. I am a staunch defender of teachers. There are bad ones, absolutely, and they are the ones that you hear about. We forget that there are good teachers out there who do care, but can't accomplish anything because of the system and lack of interest by parents.

I had a roommate in Savannah whose life was threatened. We called the police and reported it. The police and phone company were somehow able to trace the call and the teen was SLIGHTLY censured - Beth was fired because she dared to stand up for herself and her life.

Another friend in Savannah, left out of disgust with the feds, state and local requirements that left her no time to spend with students and help those who needed it.

She was a big influence after she left on our children. She worked with us and the children to better educate and help them with problems in the system.

Again thanks for the article
95 posted on 06/29/2002 8:52:27 PM PDT by dixie sass
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To: summer; dixie sass
The heart of the problem is lack of discipline--especially in the inner city schools. Not many want to teach a class where the kids are really in control. And it's not only the children who are undisciplined; the teachers are overly protected by the teachers' unions and the resulting tenure.

Of course it would help if the parents got involved, but it's too late for that now in the degenerated culture of the underclass (please read: Culture/ideology or lack thereof, NOT race/genetics), whose children need to be taught self control by teachers and principals who have the power to expell incorrigible students.

People used to think that NY City was ungovernable, but Giuliani, a man with vision, proved them all wrong with his "broken window" theory. If a building has one small broken window visible from the street that is left unattended to, it is an open invitation to vandalism. Condoning even the small infractions of the rules paves the way to greater infractions, not vice-versa.

About 15 years ago, I lived near a fairly large otherwise beautiful park with hiking trails, streams, lakes and some wildlife, but which had years of litter all along and off the trails. I started picking up the garbage every time I would take a stroll with discarded plastic bags I found. In a few months, the park became quite clean, and I noticed that there was less and less littering going on. The park stayed clean for years!

True reform is indeed possible, but there have to be rules and they must be enforced, sort of like in the old days, but with a new twist.

Thanks for the article and the ping.

96 posted on 06/30/2002 6:32:20 AM PDT by Concentrate
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To: Concentrate
Discipline is taught by the parent from the day the child is brought home from the hospital. If the there is no discipline in the home starting with regular meal times and bed times and advancing as the child matures during the first year and so on, there will be no discipline in the schools.

We stick our children into daycare at the age of 6 weeks and expect the people employed by them to take over the parental responsibilities that we abdicated. The same with kindergarten and pre-school and etc.

The first year of a child's life is the most important and the next four are crucial in forming a childs character, d personality and other personal traits. By the time they have entered the first grade a child should be able to tell the difference between right and wrong. They should have already been taught manners. They should have been taught obedience to and for authority figures and much more. They should already have some knowledge of the alphabet and their numbers.

It seems that todays parents refuse to do the necessary discipline to achieve these results because they might damage "their precious child psyche" They are unwilling to do it themselves and will not allow others to do it for them. This, in effect, has lead us to the problems we are seeing now.


97 posted on 06/30/2002 8:27:23 PM PDT by dixie sass
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To: dixie sass
It seems that todays parents refuse to do the necessary discipline to achieve these results because they might damage "their precious child psyche" They are unwilling to do it themselves and will not allow others to do it for them. This, in effect, has lead us to the problems we are seeing now.

Yes, I agree with you. But for many families, the otherwise outcome has been decided, which is why cheap excuses from teachers'union thug sympathizers is really not helpful.

98 posted on 07/01/2002 7:57:44 PM PDT by Dec31,1999
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