Yale Daily News Building
The newly minted Vermont English teacher, circa 1989 |
(Miss) Isabel Wilder
Comments
theantiyale
@ Ms. Rosen:
I got my teaching certificate in a one-time-only offer passed by the legislature during a teacher shortage in 1985 which allowed qualified candidates to do an internship in Vermont schools for four months (without pay) and thereby circumvent taking the mickey-mouse "education courses" required of all public school teachers (I already had two master degrees in 1985 and would get a third from Middlebury in 1997).
The one provision was that the master teacher you interned under inVermont had to write a recommendation for you after the four month internship in order for you to be certified.
My expenses during the four month internship were paid for by 85-year old Miss Isabel Wilder, my friend and neighbor inHamden
Connecticut ('our' town) and sister of the author Thornton Wilder.
Miss Wilder literally made me a teacher. As far as I know I am the only person to take advantage ofVermont 's 1985 one-time-only-offer.
The one provision was that the master teacher you interned under in
My expenses during the four month internship were paid for by 85-year old Miss Isabel Wilder, my friend and neighbor in
Miss Wilder literally made me a teacher. As far as I know I am the only person to take advantage of
Without this one-time-only legislative offer I never would have gone back to school to take mickey-mouse education courses when I already had two master degrees. I was too proud, too stubborn, and too poor.
Long Live Vermont!
PK
M. Div. '80
M.A., M.Ed.
M. Div. '80
M.A., M.Ed.
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ROSEN: TFA fails minorities
Looking Left
BY DIANA ROSEN
STAFF COLUMNIST
STAFF COLUMNIST
Monday, October 14, 2013
Teach for America
will be co-hosting a discussion at Yale’s Afro-American Cultural
Center on Thursday. The
Facebook event says: “Join us for an honest discussion around the pressure to
move yourself forward vs. paying it forward. Does it have to be a choice?” The
fact that TFA is hosting this event is puzzling given the program’s practices
and impact on racial minorities.
Teach
for America is a highly selective program that recruits college graduates to
teach for two years without going through a traditional certification program.
In recent years, TFA has greatly expanded in urban areas that do not exhibit
teacher shortages. These areas tend to have large minority populations,
including African Americans, yet the 2012 members of TFA are 62 percent white
and only 13 percent African American. As the program expands in cities,
laid-off veteran teachers are replaced by TFA members. In many cases, the
laid-off teachers are black. For example, the number of black teachers in Chicago has declined by
at least 43 percent since 1995. In 2000, TFA had 34 members in Chicago . This past year there were over 500.
To summarize, TFA is helping replace experienced black teachers with young
white teachers, many of whom will leave the profession after two years.
One Yale graduate, who asked to remain anonymous because of his
current employment with a related organization, was recruited by TFA at Yale
and accepted to the program. He went on to quit following the intense summer
training out of frustration with the program and its ideology. He was assigned
to Chicago , a
city where over 1,000 teachers lost their jobs this summer, and many of his
colleagues had zero interest in remaining in teaching after TFA. I had the
opportunity to speak to some of them. They talked about how much they loved
their Southside Chicago students. They also talked about how much they wanted
to go to business school or become professors.
TFA takes jobs from minority teachers, but it also has
detrimental effects on minority students. TFA members are trained in a mere
five weeks, a practice that has been criticized by many. Studies conducted have
generated conflicting conclusions about the performance of TFA members, but one
thing that almost all studies conclude is that teachers with more experience
produce higher performing students.
Members of TFA are far less likely to remain in the profession
after their two-year commitment than their counterparts from traditional
college teacher education programs. In New
York City , 85 percent of TFA members had left the
school district after four years while only 37 percent of the traditionally
educated ones did. Many TFA members view the program as a stepping-stone to
graduate school or careers outside of teaching. Fliers for the program at Fordham University
even advertise, “Learn how joining TFA can help you gain admission to Stanford Business School .”
Another contributing factor may be the tendency of teachers to “burn out” after
two years of intense working conditions with little preparation.
These young, mostly-white TFA teachers are placed in
minority-filled classrooms in the place of better-trained, more experienced
teachers. The losers here are not only the teachers who no longer are employed,
but also the students who will be taught by these less qualified TFA members. A
humorous, but sad article in The Onion this summer satirically discussed TFA
from the perspective of a student: “Just once, it would be nice to walk into a
classroom and see a teacher who has a real, honest-to-God degree in education
and not a twentysomething English graduate trying to bolster a middling GPA and
a sparse law school application.”
It is very well possible that TFA was a well-intentioned program
in its beginnings. In places where there are true shortages of teachers,
bringing in college graduates to fill the gaps makes sense, even if they are
less effective than traditionally trained teachers. But the reality today is
that TFA is operating in many urban school districts that are laying off
teachers by the hundreds and thousands.
I don’t think that students entering the program intend to
create damage in minority communities — but with the recent media attention
given to critics of TFA, these realities are becoming more and more difficult
to ignore. TFA has a very large presence at Yale. Eighteen percent of
graduating seniors in 2010 applied to the program. By junior year, students
begin receiving emails from TFA recruiters inviting them to various events.
Given the elimination of Yale’s teacher certification program
two years ago, Yale should actively encourage students to go into teaching —
but Teach for America
is not the right venue. Why not have a traditional teacher from a New Haven public school
host this week’s discussion at the Af-Am House instead of a TFA representative?
The discussion topic implies that TFA members “pay it forward” by teaching in
low-income communities. It ignores the fact that many of these members do far
more harm than good.
Diana Rosen is a sophomore in Pierson College .
Contact her at diana. rosen@yale.edu.
§
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