Gather around kids.
Sit on the carpet, Indian style.
I have a story to tell you.
Story Time:
This story is about Jack.
Jack is a hard worker. He comes
to work every day. He does whatever is
asked of him. He doesn’t make the
highest salary in his office, but he does OK for himself. He has “OK” health benefits but has to pay
for his family to be on his policy. He contributes to his retirement fund by
matching what his employer put in. He gets a decent amount of vacation that he
rarely takes because money is tight and he has so many other things he needs to
get done for his job.
Jack has a co-worker named Joe. Joe is the son of the company President. Joe hates his job at the company. He only shows up because his father MADE him
work. Joe’s dad says if he doesn’t hold
a full time job for at least 12 years, he won’t be able to collect his
inheritance. Joe has a bad attitude and
demeans and curses at his coworkers. Joe
hasn’t lifted his finger to do a single ounce of work, ever, in his tenure at
the office. There is no reasoning with the President. He thinks his son is amazing and
deserving. Joe will never be fired. Most people in the office (and in life
outside the office) try to avoid Joe.
So, one day, Jack is going about his business. Jack is getting the millions of little tasks
that he is required to do done. Jack is
even helping out other coworkers that need a hand. Right after lunch, Jack’s supervisor calls
Jack into her office.
“Jack” she says “I have a special task for you.”
Jack is eager to accommodate, so he says “Yes boss, I can do
anything! What would you like me to do?”
Well, the annual board meeting is coming up in less than a
week. I need you to prepare for that.
Jack is so excited!
“Oh wow! I get to present to the
board! This is a huge
responsibility!!! I will not let you
down!”
“Jack, I didn’t fully finish explaining what I want you to
do. You see, the President of the
company wants JOE to do the presentation.
He wants his son to be able to prove that he is capable of possibly
running the company in the future. I
want you to help PREPARE JOE to do the presentation in a week.”
Now, Jack is slightly defeated. Jack wanted to prove that HE was the one that
was capable, but soon his positive attitude is restored and he agrees to take
on the task. Jack says, “I will get Joe
ready!”
Jack leaves his supervisor’s office and finds Joe
immediately. “Joe!” he says “Have you
heard the good news? You get to do the
annual presentation to the board this year!”
Joe replies, “Who the fuck are you?”
Jack is taken aback, but continues with enthusiasm. “Don’t worry about who I am, I am here to
help you Joe. Together we can do this.”
Joe says “I’m not doing anything.”
Jack is shocked, “But…but.. why not? This is important to the company, it’s
important to your father, and it is really important to me!”
Joe retorts, “I’ve never had to do anything in my life. This entire thing is bullshit. I wish my father would die now so I don’t
have to endure the hell that is this life he is making me pretend to be a part
of.”
Jack is offended.
This job is his life. “Well, Joe,
you have to have some ideas about what should be part of this
presentation. Tell me about them. I want your voice to be heard! Maybe by speaking up the company can fix the
problems it has. We can go in the
direction you want. You are a fresh set
of eyes with new innovative ideas. Tell
me! Tell me so we can put it in the
presentation.”
Joe smirks and says, “You really want my input? OK.. here’s the first slide. Tell them to all fuck off and die. “
Jack is frustrated, so he goes to talk to his supervisor. He pleads with her. He explains that he is working so hard. SO HARD!
And that Joe just doesn’t care.
She tells him it isn’t her problem. He has to MAKE Joe care. Joe has never had any success in his life,
ever before, and it is Jack’s job to not only make Joe care, but to make him
the super star of the company.
“Oh, and by the way Jack…If Joe fails, you will get a
negative evaluation, no salary increase, and we may possibly fire you. If Joe fails, you have failed to do YOUR
job.”
Jack doesn’t know what to do. Why doesn’t Joe want to be a part of
this? There is so much riding on
this. Jack uses his laptop to start
creating the presentation. He goes over
each talking point deliberately and distinctly with Joe. Day after day. Most of the time Joe is sitting behind his
computer, checking Facebook. One morning Joe fell asleep in his
chair. Sometimes while Jack is going
over a key point, Joe takes a phone call from his girlfriend and shoos Jack out
of his office. One afternoon, Joe comes back from lunch so drunk that he passes
out in his office chair. 4 of the days,
right before the presentation, Joe doesn’t even show up to work.
Jack is sweating bullets.
The day of the board meeting arrives and he hasn’t seen Joe in 4
days. Jack is ready to take over and
deliver the presentation to save the day.
But, 3 minutes before things are to begin, Joe shows up. He is dressed well, in a suit and tie. He appears clean and sober. MAYBE. MAYBE Joe has turned the corner! Jack has hope. Jack has seen the glimmer of genius that Joe
has. Jack has done everything in his
power to make Joe feel valuable and to sense the urgency of this
presentation. Jack has given Joe all the
tools to “pass the test”. Jack is
hopeful.
Joe stands in front of the board, welcomes the ladies and
gentlemen to the office and turns around and tells them to kiss his ass.
The President of the company turns to Jack and fires him
immediately.
Is this fair? Would
you want your work evaluations to be based on the progress that a CO-WORKER
makes?
This is absurd. My
story is ABSURD! But this is what they are trying to work into the contract of Chicago
Public School teachers and other
teachers around the country. If your
students don’t show enough improvement on their standardized tests, you will be
reprimanded and possibly terminated.
Go back and read the story again… with the mindset that Jack
is a representative of the hard working teachers of this country. Joe is a representative of many of our
students that have zero motivation and consider school little more than
torture, and do everything in their power to bring those around them down. Joe knows full well he was never in danger of
“losing”, so he can behave however he’d like.
He has no stake other than to “attend 12 years mandatory by law”. He can do nothing, act like a jackass and
embarrass others and SOMEONE ELSE WILL TAKE THE FALL.
Problems with the
system
Students. Who can be passed from one grade to the next
even if they fail ALL their classes. Who have never been held accountable for a
standardized test score a day in their life.
Students who, when they don’t like a teacher because they are “hard”,
“tough” or set high standards, could purposely TANK the test to try and get the
teacher fired. Who like Joe, as much as you love them and try to teach them, at
the end of the day may still tell you to get fucked.
Parents. They are
working all day and when they get home, they are tired, I get it. But parents are expecting schools to not only
teach content and manners, but also instill DRIVE TO BE SUCCESSFUL in their
kids. News flash: kids learn by watching
what YOU do. If you aren’t DOING what
you want your kids to be doing, at least talk to them and TELL them what they
SHOULD be doing and give them some guidance.
Test scores. Scores that have no relevance in college
acceptances, promotion to the next grade, or any bearing on the STUDENT at
all. Over testing of students at all
levels leads them to believe that NO test is important.
Administrators. I have administrators in my room at least once
a week. Because I work at a high
profile/low achievement/”turn-a-round” school there are constantly people in my
room observing me. I love it. I cherish the feedback. I want my evaluation
to be based on what my SUPERVISORS see in me on a daily basis. Just like you have at YOUR job. Hell, at my “private sector” job I used to
basically WRITE my own evals. If
administrators don’t think I am being effective in my classroom, it is their
responsibility to address it BEFORE students take a test. I shouldn’t be getting glowing remarks about
my teaching all year long and then based on ONE TEST be considered ineffective?
If I appear to be doing all the right things in the classroom and students are
still doing poorly on the test, maybe there are other factors then the
TEACHING. Why is this system so REACTIVE instead of proactive.
Why work at a low
achieving school? Teachers take a lot of shit from EVERYONE. Everyone says “you are doing it wrong!” and
everyone seems to have the answers, but no one wants to get their hands
dirty. So we try THIS idea, and then
THAT idea, and then OVER HERE THIS IDEA, and then back to OMG THAT IDEA
AGAIN. My teaching has changed more in
the past 3 years then it had in the previous 9 combined.
I’m not afraid of the system. I am damn good at what I do. The majority of my students are
successful. The few that are NOT, well,
I try to help them anyway. The problem
is WHAT QUALIFIES AS SUCCESSFUL? Is 70% pass rate fair? Who designs the test?
According to No Child
Left Behind, unless every single child is proficient, we are not GOOD enough.
Ask children if their teachers were good or bad. Most will tell you that the teacher taught,
they just didn’t want to learn it (for whatever reason).
Why do I have to be held responsible for the apathy of a
generation? Is that fair? When do parents need to be accountable for
instilling a sense of drive in their children? Most days, my job as a teacher
isn’t just delivering content and managing behavior problems. I am a coach, a cheerleader, a motivational
speaker for many of my students. I do my
best, just like Jack, to get students to understand the sense of urgency about
their future. And how their future is
very bleak without education.
So, in reality… if you are going to tie my evaluation to
student achievement… what is keeping me here?
Why would I stay at a low income title 1 school? I could go to a better school, with more
motivated kids, and meet my goal every year!
If you think urban school are bad now, wait for the MASS EXODUS of
people like me. People that WANT TO WORK
HERE, and want to make a difference, but also would like to remain
employed.
I guess in the end, what it is really all about is… ask
yourself:
Would you want your work evaluation tied to someone else’s
successes and failures? Would you be OK
with being in Jack’s shoes? If not,
don’t force teachers into it.
I enjoyed the story, as a diatribe against nepotism, and feel while the events are absurd, they are sadly -not unrealistic.
ReplyDeleteAnother analogy could have been a drill sergeant trying to motivate his troops, and if they fail an objective, he dies along with them.
Or, coach with a professional sports team, whose tenure is threatened because of a prima donna player, in any case -that kind of justification for termination is wrong.
While there should be some method of standardized testing to elvauate a teacher's effectiveness, I see the public schools changing their criteria to match those tests a failure of the system, not the individual.
Or a dentist/doctor that loses their license if a patient develops a cavity or is obese. All ridiculous. And while I gladly take responsibility for MY end of the bargain (staying updated in trends, new techniques/technology, and pay for my own continuing training), there are only so many miracles I can work in a school year.
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