Sunday, October 15, 2017

Teachers should not have to pay for school supplies



Doctors and nurses don’t buy syringes and bandages for hospitals. Teachers shouldn’t have to buy school supplies out of their own pockets. 

Discretionary funds used to be available for equipment, posters, rewards and other things that made classrooms more positive and friendly places to learn.

But large boards like the TDSB are increasingly stretched just to keep going. More and more, teachers dip into their own pockets to buy markers, science supplies, etc. A recent CBC news report said teachers are spending up to $1,000 a year for so-called “extras” -- art and drama materials. 

Meanwhile the Wynne government cut spending by about 0.6 per cent in 2015/16 and 0.1 per cent in 2016/17. Where does that leave classrooms and kids?

I think it means a closer focus on EQAO outcomes -- and less money for so-called frills that we know are needed.  

Teachers shouldn’t have to pick up the slack from government austerity and spend their own money to run classrooms. Let’s fight to preserve teachers’ ability to make their classrooms friendly and stimulating places.

Ask your colleagues what they think? Talk to each other ...support each other.

...and then let me know what they said!

Nigel

Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Strong Teachers = Strong Schools



STRONG TEACHERS = STRONG SCHOOLS

    Like most teachers I know, I never imagined we would have to take our politics so seriously. 

    We were supposed to focus on the kids getting a good education and let other people – hopefully good people – take hold of the larger world around us.  Now, it’s all too clear: If we really want to focus on our kids, we also have to deal with the world around us, especially to the school system in which we teach.

    We have to find a way to be the teachers we know we can be. 

We have to stop the cutbacks the TDSB has faced over the last decade.

    And we have to bring our communities with us. 

    We already know the austerity drill: lots of “caring” official rhetoric covering up more cuts on the ground. And we know that it means reducing essential resources, raising class sizes, putting the pressure on wages and pensions. This year Special Education has been hit hard with the closing of HSP classrooms. I'm all for inclusive classrooms but they must be appropriately resourced with caring adults.

   Have you seen our kindergarten classrooms?!? 30 students with one teacher and one ECE...how is that a good thing for children?
    
  We have no choice but to respond. Strong schools need strong teachers – teachers who have autonomy to work for what their students need rather than Ministry-mandated “outcomes”, test scores, administrivia and demands for empty accountability

    We have to take back real power on the job – not only in doing our classroom work, but in making genuine decisions, as school staffs, on matters such as school budgeting, student distribution, school organization, and curriculum integration between classes. 

    We also have to bring our communities on board. It’s their power and care for our students that gives real peace and order to our schools.  

    Finally, as professionals, we know that our educational system needs more resources to ensure student success. We need smaller class sizes, particularly in full day kindergarten. We need healthy schools where emotional needs of young people are understood as central to their learning, a key step toward preventing violent incidents. We need properly-funded & well-maintained infrastructure and access to resources and technology that support student learning.  

   If we have the courage and determination to reach out to our parents and communities on these issues of funding, local power, violent incidents, class size and testing reform, I think a strong “education quality alliance” is truly possible and will make all the difference in our own lives. We can’t stand alone in fighting for the kind of school system we know will make a difference. 

    It’s the big reason I’m running for Executive Officer. I hope I have your support and your comments and critique as we move through this campaign. There is a lot of work to do standing up with teachers as individuals in a profession that has been hit hard over the past years.  But it’s work that needs to be done to make our schools our students and ourselves strong.      

    We need to look after each other as teachers and friends.

    Let me know what you think. 

    Nigel

Thursday, October 5, 2017

More Teacher Power: What does it mean?


October 5, 2017

More Teacher Power: What does it mean?

Teachers don’t need micromanagement of our work in school classrooms. It hinders our teaching and subtracts value.

I don’t mean we should just go off on our own, ignoring good classroom practices.

But teacher representatives should be consulted on the curriculum we teach and on how we evaluate our students’ response.

We need a broad curriculum outline that lets us creatively find those teachable moments. And we want ridiculous “outcomes” and standardized tests off our backs. We want to evaluate our students on what they do in our classrooms – how they read and write, the quality of their projects, how they do science and math.

We need to be seriously engaged in all the ways our schools are run. In far too many schools, teachers have no voice on important decisions that affect everyone.

ETT must push hard for such reforms, and bring parent communities with us as allies. Parents want really good schools, just as we do.

Please let me know what you think. I would love to hear from you.

Nigel