Re: Why I Can't Stand TFA
by
voo82
05/20/2008, 12:54 PM #
I've never posted before, but reading this article and the subsequent post makes me feel as though I have an obligation to. I finished my TfA commitment in '06.
1. Please understand, in the school that I taught in, there were no other options. No one else interviewed for my position. No one wanted it. No teacher who has spent 4 years preparing to be a teacher wants to teach in a school like that unless it is a last resort.
I'm trying not to bristle at the "actual teacher" jab, because I spent six sleepless weeks in the most rigorous training of my life, then got certified through night classes while teaching. TfA requires this, some people choose to go a step further and do a masters program. Oh, and I was observed once a month and paired with a veteran teacher, as all new teachers are.
2. Lawyers and Doctors have professional degrees. I've never met a practicing lawyer or doctor who came straight out of college. Teachers, on the other hand, enter the classroom right out of college, certainly with less training than a lawyer or doctor.
3. During my two years as a science teacher (that has a BS), I answered an unbelievable number of questions from veteran teachers that equate to basic science knowledge. Understanding of a subject is of paramount importance. And no, knowledge of a subject does not inherently enable one to teach it-- think about how many awful professors you had in college that droned on, oblivious to the sleeping students around them. But! That's why we were trained! I know science like the back of my hand-- all they had to do was teach me how to teach it.
I'm sure none of this will change your perspective, but I don't really care. I would not, however, say that I caused "more harm than good". My students met my 80% mastery goals and (most) passed their state tests. That, to me, sounds pretty good.