Sunday, December 22, 2013

KinderJedis:       Member of the Rebel Alliance?

     So maybe this Kindergarten/Jedi thing has gone to my head.  I'm not Rosa Parks, but I have spoken out to "the powers that be" in my county about the injustices being perpetrated upon us (teachers).  Back at Thanksgiving, my superintendent sent us all a letter telling us to be thankful for all the many blessings we had (including many accomplishments in our county).  It came at a very bad moment for me; after I had received my scores from my 2 formal evaluations (both before Thanksgiving, in Kindergarten) and so I responded from  my gut (where all of our passions are stored).   If you are interested, read on....

(The superintendent's name is being withheld)
I appreciate the sentiments of your letter.  However, you need to know that many of us are so under pressure that we are struggling to be happy.  We are NOT happy for an evaluation system that sends us home in tears feeling like failures. Your kind words are not enough to make up for the pain which your evaluation system is causing us teachers.
      Come and look around our classes and tell us it's not a beautiful learning environment for kindergartners.  It's because we have spent so much time and our own money!!   I know of many of my kindergarten teammates have gone home crying....CRYING! because we are devestated that we are given such poor scores.   And yet our school has been an A school for 12 years; how can that be if the entire kindergarten team is so inadequate???  Can you explain why all of us have had BOTH of our formal observations done on children who have only been in school for less than 65 days???    Do you have any idea how disheartening this is?
To be told that after teaching for 20 years (6 years in kindergarten, 5 years in first) that I am "requiring action" in pedagogy ....by 2 people who have never taught Early Education, is a total insult.  In kindergarten, we have been told there is no time for nap or social play.....which is more DEVELOPMENTALLY APPROPRIATE than the CLOSE readings we are forced to put our students through.  Now suddenly they are admitting these are important, but not important enough to make time for.
    I love teaching.  It's all I ever wanted to do.  I love my kinders.  I love the teachers I work with who are hurting.  I prefer teaching in Hillsborough to other places (I taught in Pasco and private schools as well).  I am scared of losing a career I value because of the over-active fault-finding of a poor evaluation system.
     I hope you think about these things over your break, because "something stinks in Denmark"

With much respect and sincerity,
Tari Baldwin
Teaching....it's not only what I do; it's what I am!

Now, in January, 2 people from the superintendents office are coming to meet with me.  My teammates want nothing to do with this.  I have been instructed to go into this meeting with facts & research but without the passion and to not mention any of their names.   But I ask you; where would this country be without the passion of Patrick Henry and John Adams?   Would we still have slavery if not for the passion of Frederick Douglas,  William Wilberforce and Harriet Beecher Stowe??   Would we still be segregating if not for the passion of Dr. Martin Luther King and the bravery of Ruby Bridges??   Go back further; what would our churches be like without the passion of Martin Luther who nailed his  99 thesis to the church door?  Look at New York and all the passionate parents who are saying "NO!" to all the testing that has gone overboard.
    Well, I for one am standing up and saying, "ENOUGH!" to how we as teachers are maligned and pressured and financially abused  (pitifully low spending accounts which force us to use our own money to subsidize our classrooms and purchase resources to teach the new CCSS standards).  Join together as teavhers....not the unions which are fat cats sitting back and licking up the cream of their kickbacks.  As teachers, we need to stand up for ourselves.  We are the ones working with individual children from diverse backgrounds and needs.  We are the ones who have to motivate them and teach them - not only academics, but character and responsibility.  We are the ones who bear the burden for the new standards and expectations.  If we do not stand up for ourselves, then we have no right to complain!
   

Sunday, August 18, 2013

         I used to be a type A personality.  I admit it!  As a teacher, that meant that I was the first one to school (when it was still dark outside) and the last one to leave.  It also meant that I had litttle time to just chatter with collegues; I had a to-do list and I was always on the go.  
     Then I married a type B man.   The first thing he put a stop to was working past 6 pm and since I taught in a rough neighborhood, I listened to him.  Then he taught me to take time to relax without guilt....well he tried anyway (for years I still felt guilty)!    
     My relaxation is reading and a nightly bath with a glass of wine.  Since I’ve found Pinterest and blogging, I have to add those too!  Yours may be exercising, walking, running, scrapbooking, photography, knitting, bird watching, sports, cooking, even watching TV….housekeeping does NOT count!  But relaxing is necessary so you can be on your toes the next day.  No one but a teacher realizes how much it takes out of you each day.  We teach because we love what we do (it’s certainly not for the paycheck) but even things we love can be draining.  Psychologists will tell us that even happy things can be stressful (marriage, baby, moving to a new house or school).  You NEED this time each day!
     19 years later I think I've found the middle road.  I've realized that as teachers we will NEVER get our to-do lists done.  I had friends who stayed at work until 3am once to get it all done...did they?  No!   I still get all panicky prior to the first day when I think of all the stuff I still want to accomplish But looking back(I've taught almost every grade up to 8th but came back to the little hugging guys), I have never had a student die because my room wasn't fully done on their first day.  It's true!  As long as their desks are ready, your desk is organized and you have your routines and procedures in place, they will do well.  In fact, working changes or additions in day to day works well for them too; it keeps their interest and teaches them to look pay attention to details. 

     So….take a deep breath.  Push down that panic if everything’s not exactly the way you envisioned….and give yourself half an hour to go relax!  I promise you'll be better for it!

So tell me…what do you do to relax each day?

Sunday, August 11, 2013

A long time ago....(well, actually it began last week)....
In a Galaxy, far, far away...
(OK, well, really....in Florida, good ole USA)...

Anyway, it's here!  My blog!  
It's about teaching Kindergarten
and wrestling with the Common Core State Standards.
It's about making learning fun and still challenging students!
It's about throwing away last years lesson plans (OK...put them deep in the closet in case you're audited).  It's in search of new and fun ideas to teach some new and old concepts, and it's about building a firm foundation for 17 students at a time!

They all think they're Princess Leia, Queen Amidala, or Anakin, anyway, so....and yes, every now and then you get a child who acts like Chewie or Jar Jar Binks!  Seriously, though...aren't we hoping that each child will turn out to be as cute as an Ewok, as sweet as Padme, and quick to learn as Luke?  Secretly, aren't we all dreading getting a Darth Maul or General Grievous (did I lose you there)?    
   
Unfortunately, not all of us work for a General Ackbar; some of us feel like we're working for Senator Palpatine. Some days, parents can act more like Jabba the Hutt or Sy Snootles, although we're all hoping for Qui-Gon Jinn or Beru Lars (Luke's adoptive mother).  And myself?  On my best days, I hope to be Shmi Skywalker or Mace Windu and yet I aspire to be Yoda....on my worst days, I come home in tears, feeling like I was more like Darth Vader.  

Yep...we're all there...in six movies and a ton of cartoons, games and novels!  The Star Wars galaxy, right in our classrooms, albeit with no weapons or Death Star....although that is what standardized tests make me think of, but let's leave that for another day!


Welcome to My Blog!

Follow my blog with Bloglovin!

I love Bloglovin'!   And Honeybee!  And Melonheadz!