Working in education has been very rewarding and very challenging. As I taught and watched students with special needs struggle with learning and life, I strived to find more efficient means to help support them. When I was a new teacher in Gardena, California, I asked the school psychologist how do I help my students with auditory processing or visual integration? I received the standard answer, “Well, the student can sit in the front…” This answer was the beginning of many standard answers I would receive from blank faced people who wondered why I asked and why did I care. This was also the beginning of my trek to help students learn by adjusting the learning to the strengths of the students. Sounds simple right?
Not really. Try explaining to the district curriculum administrator in the inner city why students should travel the California coast as they learn standards based lessons in the areas of history, geography, science etc. She looked at me with a straight face and said, “Why do you want to take these students on this trip?” I explained that many of these students had limited experiences and this would enhance their learning capacities. I continued by saying, many of these students have not traveled or even seen downtown Los Angeles. The district curriculum administrator looked at me with a straight face and said, “Take them downtown.” That was it. It took weeks to schedule a meeting that lasted 5 minutes. I prepared: a written report which included the lesson projection and state standards, arranged the district approved vendor and arranged for funding. I wish I knew her name, I’m sure I blocked it out. I was very discouraged.
At my school site, Peary Middle School, I had great success in the following: being chosen to participated in the Mark Walden Yosemite Science Trip with 11 students, 3 years of Big Bear’s Adapted Ski School ski trips with Stephanie Anderson from Whitney High School, and a Harlem Globetrotter writing award and school assembly that my 7th grade special education class won 1st place from the Daily News.
The disturbing rejection from the meeting with the district administrator did not drive me from the field of public education. I did rethink working in an environment that had a curriculum administrator who was not interested in curriculum that did not fit her ideals. I hated leaving my students, but I had to move on. I wonder how many good teachers move on, just move on. Could this be one of the problems with public education?
Saturday, July 4, 2009
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