Los Angeles Times

We need to retain principals too

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Re “How to fix U. S. education,” Opinion, March 15

I am a former school district trustee, teacher of students and parent of three sons, and Sarah Carr’s observatio­ns come close to my own on educationa­l improvemen­t.

However, retention of outstandin­g school administra­tors is also critical. The successful schools I observed or worked at had principals who spent several years at that site and knew their teachers well. They supported their staff, and teachers responded positively.

If principals are frequently rotated or promoted, their evaluation­s will not be as respected by staff members; they will not have the informatio­n necessary to guide and support teachers. Likewise, as teachers are regularly evaluated, principals need to be routinely evaluated and supported so that they can achieve the districts’ goals and improve student learning.

Barbara L. Chavira

Monterey Park

In The Times, Carr indicated that new teachers leave the profession because of a lack of training and support. This is wrong and naive; it blames the school systems.

As a teacher and school administra­tor for more than 34 years, I know that novice teachers generally leave for two reasons.

First, young people want to try out teaching to see if it’s their “cup of tea.” That’s their right, and they should not be shamed. Second, teachers need money to support themselves and their families.

There’s a teacher shortage in California. Within five years, the deficiency will be dismal. How do we fix this? Not to sound crassly capitalist­ic, but please pay members of the profession that prepares all other profession­s well. Until then, home teaching may not be a choice, but a necessity.

Perhaps the old proverb “you get what you pay for” is apropos.

Tom Kaminski

Redondo Beach

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