Posted in Thoughts About Children

Oscar Winners…Teachers of Today…

I nominate
the Teachers of Today …
#Oscars2023
#AmericanTeacherAct

โค๏ธ๐ŸŒŸโœจ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐ŸŽ๐Ÿ“š

Posted in Mission, Thoughts About Children

Who Wants to Teach in Florida? – The American Prospect

BY LUCA GOLDMANSOUR FEBRUARY 23, 2023

Gov. Ron DeSantis wants Floridaโ€™s K-12 educators to do as theyโ€™re told… On top of low pay, difficulties in securing long-term contracts, the stress of high-stakes testing, and increases in student mental health issues, public school teachers must stick to the governorโ€™s conservative script or risk being fired..

That script includes the Parental Rights in Education Act, colloquially known as the โ€œDonโ€™t Say Gayโ€ law, the Stop WOKE Act, and the recent statewide ban on College Boardโ€™s Advanced Placement African American studies curriculum.

These developments have contributed to the highest teacher vacancy rate in the country by creating a climate of paranoia that has exasperated many teachers, chased others out of the profession entirely, and deterred aspiring educators. Culture-war turmoil combined with the pandemic eraโ€™s tight labor market means that Florida and most Deep South states have struggled to recruit teachers. When the far-right Republican became governor in 2019, there were 2,217 vacant teacher positions in Florida. As of early January, there were about 5,300 openings statewide, with an additional 4,631 support staff openings (excluding Miami-Dade County), the Florida Education Association told the Prospect.

In 2022, Florida allocated an additional $250 million over the previous fiscal year to increase teacher salaries. While the funding boosted the base salary for new teachers to $47,500, the pay increase for experienced teachers did not even cover cost-of-living increases. Overall, the pay raise bumped the state up from 49th to 48th in average teacher pay nationwide, according to the National Education Association. DeSantis has proposed $200 million in more funding for teacher pay in his fiscal 2023-2024 budget, which according to the FEA, will hardly move the needle. โ€œPay in the third-largest state can and should rank in the top 10 nationally,โ€ FEA President Andrew Spar said in a statement.

More from Luca GoldMansour


Floridaโ€™s vacancy issue has its roots in the stateโ€™s decades-long role as a laboratory for the rightโ€™s assault on public education, with its Republican governors playing key parts. Former Gov. Jeb Bush made school choice and high-stakes standardized testing his signature issues in the 2000s, before his brother President George W. Bush took โ€œreformsโ€ like the No Child Left Behind Act to the White House. DeSantisโ€™s predecessor, Rick Scott, now the stateโ€™s junior senator, also expanded charter schools and voucher programs while chipping away at long-term contracts for teachers. But DeSantis has not only built on his predecessorsโ€™ devotion to privatization and exploitative salaries, he has also squelched teaching, learning, and productive dialogues on American history, race, and gender.

The teacher shortages exhaust the remaining educators, and buttress DeSantisโ€™ conservative takeover of public-school curriculums by whittling down institutional resistance to his culture-war inspired edicts. Educators are โ€œfrustrated to the point where they don’t have a sense of hope anymore,โ€ said Steve Frazier, Executive Director of the Florida League of Middle Schools, who worked as a teacher and principal in Broward County for over three decades. โ€œItโ€™s like anything, you keep getting beat down, eventually you just wave the white flag and say I can’t do it anymore.โ€


Floridaโ€™s vacancy issue has its roots in the stateโ€™s decades-long role as a laboratory for the rightโ€™s assault on public education, with its Republican governors playing key parts. Former Gov. Jeb Bush made school choice and high-stakes standardized testing his signature issues in the 2000s, before his brother President George W. Bush took โ€œreformsโ€ like the No Child Left Behind Act to the White House. DeSantisโ€™s predecessor, Rick Scott, now the stateโ€™s junior senator, also expanded charter schools and voucher programs while chipping away at long-term contracts for teachers. But DeSantis has not only built on his predecessorsโ€™ devotion to privatization and exploitative salaries, he has also squelched teaching, learning, and productive dialogues on American history, race, and gender.

The teacher shortages exhaust the remaining educators, and buttress DeSantisโ€™ conservative takeover of public-school curriculums by whittling down institutional resistance to his culture-war inspired edicts. Educators are โ€œfrustrated to the point where they don’t have a sense of hope anymore,โ€ said Steve Frazier, Executive Director of the Florida League of Middle Schools, who worked as a teacher and principal in Broward County for over three decades. โ€œItโ€™s like anything, you keep getting beat down, eventually you just wave the white flag and say I can’t do it anymore.โ€

Tawanda Carter, a literacy coach in Broward County for 23 years, took a classroom position this year because of the shortages. To support her students in the long run, Carter realized that she must pick and choose her battles to avoid burnout, especially when a parent objects to certain topics like learning about the experiences of other racial and ethnic groups. โ€œAt the end of the day, I recognize in myself and others that you just do what you can do,โ€ she says.

Teacher vacancies also give DeSantis and Florida state lawmakers an opportunity to seed schools with instructors whom they believe would be more amenable to far-right positions. Under Floridaโ€™s Military Veterans Certification Pathway program, which came into effect on July 1 of last year, veterans with at least four years of service, an honorable or medical discharge, 60 college credits, and a minimum 2.5 GPA can apply for a temporary teaching certificate after passing a subject-area exam of their choice.

Florida teachers should have the leeway to design appropriate lesson plans for their students and not be shackled to politically imposed curriculums…

New teachers hired under the program are assigned a mentor teacher for at least two years, and will have five years to fulfill the requirements for permanent certification, including obtaining a bachelorโ€™s degree. Many experienced educators worry that the program will not help fill vacancies but instead lower the standards for people entering the profession. DeSantis has also proposed offering bonuses to veterans and retired first responders who agree to teach full-time for at least two years. Such recruitment drives are a disservice to veterans and first responders seeking second careers, as well as to current students and teachers. The state has processed hundreds of applications, but only twelve veterans have been hired so far, the Florida Department of Education told the Prospect.

Herman Bennett, a historian of the African diaspora at the City University of New York, helped the College Board draft the African American Studies AP curriculum. He says the Florida moves remind him that fifty years ago a teacherโ€™s credentials were irrelevant for some schools. โ€œIt’s reminiscent of what history teaching once was in my generation, there was the idea that the historian could be the football coach,โ€ he says. โ€œBecause it really didn’t matter. You could have a knucklehead who was responsible for the civics course.โ€

For Bennett, DeSantisโ€™s rejection of the College Boardโ€™s African American studies course signals the debasing of teaching and learning loud and clear. โ€œIf the AP course was simply Black names, dates and facts, DeSantis wouldnโ€™t have a concern about it because that would just produce an inert and passive citizen.โ€ Bennett said. โ€œAfro-American studies demonstrate that there are histories of struggle, and if you donโ€™t have those understandings, then you see the possibility of change as limited.โ€

With the College Board caving into DeSantisโ€™s demands, the stateโ€™s educators can only do so much to get around these obstacles. By removing African American and other racial, ethnic, and gender studies topics from public school curriculums, and diluting discussions of contemporary issues like Black Lives Matter, another Republican governor is once again trying to export new limitations on learning across the country. Florida teachers should have the leeway to design appropriate lesson plans for their students and not be shackled to politically imposed curriculums. Stifling creativity in classroom instruction ultimately means that teachers can only teach exactly what they are told to teach and nothing moreโ€”if they decide to stay in the profession at all

https://prospect.org/education/02-22-2023-desantis-education-teacher-vacancies/

Posted in Mission, Thoughts About Children

Our Precious Children …Maya Angelou

#Caturday
#Floridateacher
#Hope_On_The_Street
#WomensHistoryMonth
๐Ÿ’œ๐Ÿ’ซโœจ๐ŸŒŸ๐ŸŒป๐ŸŽ๐Ÿ“š

Posted in Mission, Reflections, Thoughts About Children

Dr. Seuss Day March 3…

My daughter loved learning to read…by reading “Dr. Seuss…

You’re never too old…
Too wacky, too wild…
To pick up a book and read to a child…

-Dr. Seuss
#DrSeussDay
#ReadingIsFun ๐Ÿ’œ๐Ÿช„๐Ÿ’ซโœจ๐ŸŒŸ๐Ÿ“š

Posted in Mission, Reflections, Thoughts About Children

Once Upon a Time…Our Precious Children…

#floridateacher๐Ÿ’”๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐ŸŽ๐Ÿ“š Unconscionable…
Our precious children…

WITH FREEDOM…
BOOKS, FLOWERS, AND THE MOON,

WHO COULD NOT BE HAPPY?

Once upon a time…
Our precious children…

Posted in Mission, Thoughts About Children

Florida Turns Attention to Alternate Tests Amid Feud with College Board …

By
Jeffrey S. SolochekTimesPublished Feb. 20

The big story: Floridaโ€™s dispute with the College Board continued to broaden, with Gov. Ron DeSantisโ€™ suggestions that perhaps the state can do without the organizationโ€™s courses and exams beginning to take shape.

Top state officials said they had been in conversations with Classic Learning Test โ€” developed in part by DeSantis appointee to the New College board of trustees Mark Bauerlein โ€” to implement that exam as an alternate to the College Boardโ€™s SAT. The Classic Learning Test supporters tout it as being focused on the โ€œgreat classical and Christian tradition,โ€ a movement that has been gaining traction in some charter and private school circles…

A move away from the College Board would not come without consequences. Tens of thousands of teens take Advanced Placement courses annually with the hope of earning college-level credits. They also take the groupโ€™s SAT test to help them earn university entrance and Bright Futures scholarship eligibility. Here are four things to know as the state ponders the role of the College Board.

The discussion about the organizationโ€™s future in Florida arose as an offshoot of DeSantisโ€™ objections to some of the content in the proposed AP African American studies course. He called for changes before he would allow the Department of Education to consider approving it for use in Floridaโ€™s public schools. Much of the dispute centered on key ideas and phrases that have become politicized. The Washington Post examines how the course language changed over time.

Four other states now are reviewing whether the course meets their policies and laws on teaching about race, Axios reports.

The argument has become much more than academic. Black leaders and activists are vowing to take to the streets to fight against what they view as DeSantisโ€™ assault on civil rights. The conservatives are standing firm in their effort to advance a counter-revolution and purge what they call โ€œwoke-nessโ€ out of the schools, government and society…

https://www.tampabay.com/news/education/2023/02/20/florida-turns-attention-alternate-tests-amid-feud-with-college-board/

The Rev. Al Sharpton speaks to a crowd of hundreds from the steps of the Senate portico during the National Action Network demonstration in response to Gov. Ron DeSantis’ rejection of a high school African American history course, Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2023 in Tallahassee, Fla…

Some people have asked whether DeSantis took any AP courses while attending Dunedin High. The Daily Beast published a page from his yearbook indicating that he was given an AP American History Award in 1996…

(Alicia Devine /Tallahassee Democrat via AP) [ ALICIA DEVINE | AP ]
staff

Posted in Reflections, Thoughts About Children

Jury Duty…Could Have Been one of my Students

I was recently summoned to serve on jury duty here in my community, Flagler County…I felt it would be my responsibility as a citizen and a privilege…

Never visiting our court house, Arriving at around 8:00 AM…I was screened by the officers on duty, who were all to be welcoming and appreciative…

The judge from the Seventh Circuit met us in a preliminary room where he spent a great deal of time going over our schedule and responsibilities… He said we may be there for 2 to 3 days…He was extremely knowledgeable and appreciative that we were there to serve…

There were about 25 of us, about 17 white men, and 8 female, one of whom was the only black… several Hispanic, one Asian…

We were then escorted to the Hearing room where all attorneys were present…A white, female prosecutor; and at the defense table 2 males, one of whom was black… Learning, one was the public defender and the other was the defendant, a young black male…

What struck me so, not having any previous knowledge about this case…Since both males were wearing suits, I assumed, at first, the black male was another attorney...

This is not how he looked during the trial…He did have a suit on, however his hair was uncovered…And he had affect…

How wrong I was…He was the defendant…My impression was, he definitely could have been one of my students…What went wrong in his life that led him to this place in his life?

I was so relieved that I was not chosen to be part of this jury…All 7 were white, with one being a female…

My heart breaks for our children…

Jury did find him guilty of the charges…

He is in for life…for his orevious crime and there is an appeal pending..This current crime will Just add more time to a life sentence for his crimes…Where there was no loss of life…

Already Serving Life, Carlos DuPree Is Convicted on Charges of Assaulting Jail Deputy

Posted in Mission, Thoughts About Children

#GunReformNow…MSU…

Just another school shooting…

Why do we have the NRA and divisive political climate having such little regard for our precious children??!!

When will they be the priority??!!
#GunReformNow
#SchoolSafety
#Floridateacher ๐Ÿ’”๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐ŸŽ๐Ÿ“š

Posted in Reflections, Thoughts About Children

#BlackHistoryMonth…2023

@NatlHeadStart
#BlackHistoryMonthโ€ฏโ€ฏโ€ฏ
During this “era”
Inspiring my becoming an elementary school teacher in 1972
Specializing in early childhood education…
Beginning at a federally funded school… teaching migrants…

Then…Even having the opportunity to lead a Headstart Parenting Group in1974…

And much of my 38 year teaching career.. teaching children of diversity through Federal Funded Programs… ๐Ÿ’œ๐Ÿ’ซ๐ŸŒŸ๐Ÿ’ซ๐Ÿ“š

Posted in Mission, Reflections, Thoughts About Children

Florida Athletes May Soon be Required to Submit their Menstrual History to Schools…

BY SOMMER BRUGAL AND ANDRE FERNANDEZ UPDATED FEBRUARY 02, 2023 6:40 PM

Florida’s children who are the most vulnerable; those in need of inclusion the most … are being targeted; singled out by Governor Ron DeSantis only to bring national attention in his quest for power, securing his candidacy for president in 2024…

This latest requirement for Florida’s high school female athletes sharing their personal menstrual history goes beyond what anyone…other than family or a doctor, should know!!

He does not care how his authoritarian actions hurt Florida… especially our children…

He only became our governor by voter suppression and a lack of strong support of the Democratic candidate, Charlie Crist…

I myself remember, living in Flagler and Volusia County where he was our representative, and did absolutely nothing…

Now, with his divisive agenda, he has a strong support of those with money giving him the national stage…

This latest attack is once again hurting our high school athletes…

A proposed draft of a physical education form in Florida could require all high school student athletes to disclose information regarding their menstrual history, which opponents are pushing back against. Richard Bagan via Unsplash

Read more at: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/education/article272020202.html#storylink=cpy