Tapping Experts to Teach
Four years ago, I was dismayed by the terrible math
education my son was getting at a Seattle public K-8 school; for two years in a
row, he had had the same incompetent teacher. So I pulled together a committee
of similarly concerned parents and started a before-school math program. I put
an ad on Craigslist and received résumés from a dozen qualified math teachers.
Students were divided into two classes of 15. They paid about $250 each for the
school year to cover the teacher’s salary. Over the course of their one
45-minute class each week, they completed an entire Algebra I curriculum. Many
who had previously hated math became big fans of the subject.
At a time when so many of the jobs available in our region
require a high level of math and science, our public schools are failing us.
What chance do we have of graduating students in such important fields as
chemistry, physics and computer science when so many give up on math by the
eighth grade?
Key to the success of our before-school math class was the
teacher we ended up hiring: She had a Ph.D. in philosophy and logic, and had
taught math at the college level in California. She wanted to teach in the
Seattle Public Schools system, but couldn’t get a job because she didn’t have
the requisite credentials.
Public schools need to take advantage of our region’s wealth
of science and math talent. We should give public school principals, like
private school principals, the authority to pick the best people available to
teach math and science classes, regardless of what their credentials may be. No
doubt there are many retired engineers and scientists who would enjoy a second
career teaching in the schools. They would not only understand their subjects
better than many credentialed teachers, but they might also even be able to get
students excited about careers in their fields. Many youth avoid those fields
because of the tough work required. But few realize that once they get over the
hurdle of acquiring an education, prospects for an exciting and lucrative
career are higher in the sciences than in liberal arts.
Former Microsoft executive Scott Oki has been an aggressive
advocate for school reform not just on the question of certification but also
on a range of issues outlined in his book, Outrageous Learning: An Education
Manifesto. Oki’s next step is to create a
parents’ union, a membership organization that would raise money to represent
the interests of parents and kids to counter the influence of principals’
unions and teachers’ unions. It’s a great idea. Our failure in Washington to
pursue innovative solutions to improving schools is particularly punishing
today because this intransigence has prevented us from gaining access to grants
offered under President Obama’s Race to the Top program. At a time when our
schools are in crisis, we can’t afford to let unions and bureaucratic inertia
stymie progress. There are smart, obvious solutions that we fail to pursue at
our peril.

Leslie D. Helm, editor










Comments
Better teachers
The point of my editorial is that we are not hiring the best teachers available to us. Better teachers would do a better job of educating students. Any obstacle to getting those better teachers should be removed. If the state's certification system is to blame, I would hope the teachers' unions would propose changes that would improve the system without creating barriers to the hiring of better teachers. The attitude that outsiders "should not point your fingers where it does not belong" is precisely the problem. Every resident should be pointing his or her finger at this problem. It is a serious problem affecting the lives of thousands of students and everybody should be looking for a way to address it. What is your proposal for improving the certification system?
Post new comment