Baltimore Sun

Teachers like me are being mistreated by the system

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I moved here from New York bright-eyed and bushy-tailed to enter the public school world of teaching. Although naive, I approached all situations with a positive spirit. A spirit that over my six years in Baltimore City Public Schools has been beaten down and broken to the point of exhaustion.

I have been told to take the time to build relationsh­ips while leadership pushes pacing and test scores, valuing numbers and data over our students, their needs and who they are. The system tells me to make “no excuses” while providing me with little to no classroom supplies, inadequate access to technology, poor working conditions and an absolute irresponsi­ble disregard and lack of acknowledg­ement for the harsh environmen­ts and circumstan­ces our children often experience and that impact their learning each day.

When basic needs are not met, authentic learning cannot occur (see Maslow’s hierarchy of needs). My pay rate and “raises” are tied directly to my observatio­ns and student test scores, as well as student attendance data, while a continuall­y increasing class size, decreasing staff, and the creation of an unrealisti­c workload leaves teachers worn down, overwhelme­d, overworked and feeling completely helpless.

North Avenue preaches “wholeness” of students and staff while demonstrat­ing a complete disregard for their well-being and an extreme disconnect to the challengin­g reality and hostile work environmen­ts many teachers and students face each day upon entering what should be a safe place. The school board passes new proposals that directly impact teachers and teacher salary while creating a more hostile work environmen­t for many in the process and completely disregardi­ng anything the Baltimore Teachers Union pleaded, and provided evidence for, once again demonstrat­ing their complete lack of authentic and genuine concern for staff and student wholeness.

If the system’s top leaders expect our students to do better and expect our teachers to do better while posting “#NoExcuses” all over social media, then they must do better. We must do better, for our students, for our staff, for the city of Baltimore, and for our future.

Kimberly Cronin, Baltimore

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 ?? BALTIMORE SUN FILE PHOTO ?? Baltimore City Public Schools headquarte­rs building on North Avenue.
BALTIMORE SUN FILE PHOTO Baltimore City Public Schools headquarte­rs building on North Avenue.

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