Your rewards for your efforts are unpaid furlough days, larger class sizes, no pay increases (but increased expenses) and a second-guessing public that seems to feel you should be able to stop all of society’s ills at the classroom door. And then there are the politicians who promote “school choice.” That “choice” doesn’t seem to include making public schools better but it does include making all the other choices more attractive.
I’m not sure what you have done to deserve such treatment. Much of it, I believe, comes from the fact the politicians don’t like the various associations that lobby for public education. They derisively call them “educrats.” This becomes an elephant fight and you tend to get trampled in the process and punished for something you haven’t done.
In addition to severely cutting state funding for public education, sometimes our intrepid public servants wander into La-La land. House Speaker Pro Tem Jan Jones (R-Alpharetta) claims you are the most highly-compensated teachers in the nation. She also claims that the moon is made of green cheese but that is a story for another day.
I assume Jones was trying to make her legislative colleagues feel better about themselves for taking such good financial care of you and to help her pass the charter school amendment. Maybe you could share your pay stubs with her.
You know my feelings about the charter school amendment. I am still waiting for someone to tell me why we should vote for it this fall. Proponents say the state needs this amendment to authorize state charter schools. What they don’t tell you is the State Board of Education has approved 13 charter schools in a year. So, where is the need?
This isn’t about charter schools. It is about letting for-profit charter school management companies get their foot in the door whether your local school system likes it or not. The irony shouldn’t be lost on you that Gov. Nathan Deal signed the charter school amendment bill in Cherokee County, home of Sen. Majority Leader Chip Rogers (R-Woodstock), not exactly the best friend of public education in the state.
You should know also that the governor, Mr. Rogers, and Jan Jones all received campaign contributions from Florida-based Charter Schools USA, the group that had their petition to operate a facility in Cherokee County turned down by the local school board.
I doubt Gov. Deal loses sleep over my opinions but if his image polishers are reading this, I consider signing the bill in Cherokee County a cheap shot at the Cherokee school system, one of the best in the state. Plus, the event exhibited regal indifference to our growing suspicions as voters that campaign contributions do indeed influence political decisions.
I have serious skin in this game. Four members of my family are public school teachers. My son and my son-in-law have been in the classroom long enough to roll with the punches. Nothing much surprises them anymore. But, now I have two grandchildren who have completed their first year of teaching. Nick Wansley is a chemistry teacher and coach at South Forsyth Hill School and his wife, Mandy, teaches at Riverwatch Middle School, also in Forsyth County.
They are the future of public education in Georgia and I am extremely proud of the decision they made to be teachers. Obviously, they both could make more money and have fewer headaches in another profession, but they believe this to be a calling — and it is. The school teacher was one of our community’s most respected professionals when I was growing up. That was before government at all levels got involved and made a mess of things.
Now our legislative leaders cozy up to Washington think tanks and for-profit charter school management groups and preach “school choice.” It would be nice if they would deign to help you fix the problems in public education, not run away from them. I have no confidence the current crop in power will do that but they need to know — and you need to know — that I appreciate all you do and I’m not going away. I pray you don’t, either. We’ve just begun to fight.
You can reach Dick Yarbrough at yarb2400@bellsouth.net or P.O. Box 725373, Atlanta, Georgia 31139.












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We need teachers and staff that can be held accountable for the results.
We don't need state control over local schools
The truth will out.
You must really enjoy life.
I shell out over $25k annually for private (Christian at that, so go ahead and flail away at this "bigot" in addition to your gratuitous, impotent and engage' "Fox News" bromide--funny how "free thinkers" are the first to stereotype and demean, albeit ineffectually) education for my 2 girls, not because I wouldn't rather spend it on some indulgence, but because my children are not the subjects of some trendy sociological experiment.
You are free to do whatever you want with your children. Good luck.
I love my kids teachers though, and appreciate everything they do. It is the administrations and BOEs that can all find a one way ticket to Haiti for all I care. Instead of trying to work together with EVERYONE, Cherokee BOE and Mr. P have done everything possible to polarize their employees and pit neighbor against neighbor.
Then rent the film "Waiting for Superman" to see what real school reformers are up against.
As far as waiting for superman goes....while I enjoyed the film, it spoke more to me about how much more we could do as a school if our new primary role wasn't as babysitter. Ask those famililes what happens if their kids don't behave at those charter schools they so anxiously wait to get into...their rear ends get shipped out and the next in line comes in. If my school could take only the 10% of our student population that we wanted then our scores and academic achievements would sky rocket.
Readers are invited to Google "NEA" and "donations" and find even a single Republican or independent in that union's list of top campaign money beneficiaries.
@total: Right on its own website the NEA confirms it's a union. Google "NEA" and "union" to see it.
Not even once.
Listen very carefully Jane there are no teacher unions in Georgia. A union has collective bargaining with the employer. Public Employee Unions in Georgia are against the law. The Teacher Associations in Georgia are no different than the Georgia Bar Association, AARP, Nurses Association, etc. PAGE & GAE are teachers associations with GAE affiliated with the NEA. The part of the dues that go to the NEA are used for lobbying at the National Level. PAGE's dues go to the local level. Both are powerless in Georgia (that's why I don't belong to one).
I ask you what about all of the For Profit School Lobbyist, and Michelle Rhee pandering her BS to the legislator's? They are doing the same thing as the teacher associations, unions etc. Just because you don't agree with one side does not mean you need to demonize them. An agenda is an agenda.
According to your thinking teachers should not be allowed to belong to an association? Are teachers not covered by the same Constitution you are? The Extreme RIght is no better than the Extreme Left. Both are looney, so find someone else to blame for society's ills.
You must have some bad history with a teacher that you are still carrying. Maybe you are a former teacher who could not cut it in the classroom . I'm sorry you are such a pitiful angry person. Teacher's in this miserable state are not the cause of what's wrong with our society like Mr. Yarbrough state's so well in his column.
I suggest you take your right wing Fox News/ Koch brothers talking points and march off into the sunset.
By the way to all you teacher haters out there like Jane and Susie Q. if you are so damn smart why don't you become a teacher instead of sitting around spewing forth you BS. You gutless wonders would last about one hour in a public school.
Sincerely,
A Really Pissed off Teacher
You and Jane W. should get together and go to some Koch Brothers meetings aka the Brown Shirts and bash teachers all you want.
I have found that most men, like you and Neil Boortz, who constantly bash teachers usually have a problem with women. Usually they are momma's boys or they can get a date. I guess rejection hurts your feelings Don.
I'm sure there are associations for guys like you who need help relating to women.
Keep up the goose stepping Don in your Jackboots give my regards to David and Charles Koch at the party HQ.
Do a Google search on "NEA" and "union" and get educated.
And I'll take Gov. Jindal's values over Nancy Pelosi's any day!
As far as your comment about the nut job teachers in NC, it is sad that a few individuals make us all look bad. I pride myself in teaching kids to value opposing opinions, be open minded, and god forbid think for themselves. It made my year when about half of my kids made me thank you cards telling me because I pushed them they pushed themselves, feel better prepared for college, learned how to really write essays and take tests, opened their minds, etc...
I love my kids and I love teaching, but the system makes me so mad because the educational bureacrats don't care about us or the students. Most of the educrats haven't even been teachers or it's been so long since they were in a classroom they are out of touch. It is like a Dentist telling a Heart Surgeon how to do their job. I really hope that you can open your mind to the fact that there are good teachers still out there in the public schools.