One real problem with the public school system is that it (like so much government) is bloated... teacher-light and administrator-heavy. At the school where I teach students with emotional disabilities (middle school), we have math specialists, reading specialists, psychologists, and social workers who are doing the jobs that parents used to do. But at the central office, we have behavior specialists, transition specialists, yada yada yada, and they have to justify their jobs, so every few years they recycle some old program and call it "new." New math, new behavior plans for students, new ways of diagnosing, new ways of teaching, and they're all stuff that was tried before and now they've renamed it something new. And for a year or two we get useless training on the program, and then it fades out. If you want to talk about teachers not having time to do stuff, it's because of all the useless "training" they give us.
That's not to say we shouldn't have training. But it should be relevant. My students, for example, have generally spent time either in mental hospitals or juvenile detention, or both. They're great kids who are trying to overcome some pretty terrible things. Last year I had a really sweet autistic young man. I asked if the autism specialist could come give me a few pointers. I had to fill out papers in triplicate and go through all sorts of hoops, just for a 15-minute chat!
Last year I taught 12 subjects to 3 different grades, with no assistant. Try teaching 6th grade math, 7th grade social studies, and 8th grade language arts in the same classroom at the same time! It's no wonder that the burn-out rate in my county is 3 years.
If I could homeschool, I would, but since my husband died several years ago, I don't have that option. It amazes me that parents and teachers are so seldom on the same page. I've made it a policy that when I talk to parents, I focus on how great their kid is, and when I have to explain problems, I don't imply that it's the parents' fault, even if it probably is. Why alienate the main person in your student's life?! And yet I've seen teachers do it over and over, always ready to assign blame instead of trying to get the parent's insight. I could go on forever (since it's the first week of school and I'm over-stressed already!!) but I think you all get the idea...
That's not to say we shouldn't have training. But it should be relevant. My students, for example, have generally spent time either in mental hospitals or juvenile detention, or both. They're great kids who are trying to overcome some pretty terrible things. Last year I had a really sweet autistic young man. I asked if the autism specialist could come give me a few pointers. I had to fill out papers in triplicate and go through all sorts of hoops, just for a 15-minute chat!
Last year I taught 12 subjects to 3 different grades, with no assistant. Try teaching 6th grade math, 7th grade social studies, and 8th grade language arts in the same classroom at the same time! It's no wonder that the burn-out rate in my county is 3 years.
If I could homeschool, I would, but since my husband died several years ago, I don't have that option. It amazes me that parents and teachers are so seldom on the same page. I've made it a policy that when I talk to parents, I focus on how great their kid is, and when I have to explain problems, I don't imply that it's the parents' fault, even if it probably is. Why alienate the main person in your student's life?! And yet I've seen teachers do it over and over, always ready to assign blame instead of trying to get the parent's insight. I could go on forever (since it's the first week of school and I'm over-stressed already!!) but I think you all get the idea...