Los Angeles Times

Help teachers, help students

-

Re “There are bears stalking our schools after all,” Opinion, Dec. 9

Natalie Babcock is very perceptive for a secondyear teacher. Everything she said about public education — the 60-hour workweeks, the overcrowde­d classrooms, the lack of help serving students with special needs, among other problems — is probably true in almost every California school district.

I still remember my first years teaching third and fourth grades. When I would ask colleagues when my profession­al life would get easier, they just smiled and said it would not.

Well, I retired after 25 years in teaching, and that observatio­n proved correct. Still, I loved teaching, and so do most educators. That’s why we stay in such a hard job.

We let the powers that control the funding take advantage of us. Paying us more money is not a real solution; rather, we need more people to help us do our jobs. Putting students’ needs first means helping the teachers first. Carol Lamar

Yorba Linda

Let’s face it: We have made the teaching profession a daily chore that satisfies the dictum of a largely uninformed political apparatus. We must now consider why schools in Scandinavi­a and Singapore are more successful than we.

Could it be that they train teachers for five years basically for free? Could it also be that training future teachers is done collaborat­ively, and educators are expected to teach in that way? Is it because teacher candidates are almost guaranteed a job upon graduation with salaries commensura­te with firstyear engineers or doctors?

The cure to the malaise of hopelessne­ss among so many young teachers is to treat them as “profession­als”

with the ability to create successful curriculum for their classrooms, to set goals for themselves and devise remediatio­n for their weaknesses.

Only then will we see our education system begin to reach the goals so desired by the public. Bob Bruesch

Rosemead The writer is a 1997 inductee into the National Teachers Hall of Fame.

While teachers unquestion­ably face the many challenges that Babcock notes, she fails to mention that educators generally have a vacation of two to three months every year.

This must be considered when evaluating teacher salaries. Gerry Swider

Sherman Oaks

My head nearly left my neck from nodding in affirmatio­n when reading Babcock’s pitch-perfect piece. There was one thing missing, and I assume that, as a charter school teacher, she is flying solo in ways more than she mentioned:

“I need to work with my colleagues to unionize and join fellow Los Angeles Unified School District teachers who are reaching out to parents and the community at large to further galvanize the fight against the wealthy privatizer­s before they successful­ly undermine public education into extinction.” Joel Freedman

Los Angeles The writer is an LAUSD magnet school teacher.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States