Close Menu
Syracuse New TimesSyracuse New Times
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Jump to Category…
    • All Events
    • Club Dates
    • Comedy
    • Exhibits
    • Film
    • Fundraisers
    • Learning
    • Literati
    • Outings
    • Other
    • Specials
    • Sports
    • Stage
    • Trivia
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    Syracuse New TimesSyracuse New Times
    Demo
    • CNY Events Calendar
      • Add My Event
      • Advertise On Calendar
    • News
      • News
      • Business
      • Sports
    • Arts
      • Art
      • Stage
      • Music
      • Film
      • Television
    • Lifestyle
      • Food
      • Wellness
      • Fashion
      • Travel
    • Opinion & Blogs
      • Things That Matter (Luke Parsnow)
      • New York Skies (Cheryl Costa)
    • Photos
    • Special Editions
      • 2019 Spring Times
      • 2019 Winter Times Edition
      • 2018 Holiday Times
      • 2018 SALT Awards
      • 2018 Best of Syracuse
      • 2018 Autumn Times
      • 2018 SNT Student Survival Guide
      • The 2018 Arts Issue
      • 2018 Summer Times
    • Family Times Magazine
    • CNY Community Guide
    Syracuse New TimesSyracuse New Times
    Home»News»War on Teachers is Old School
    News

    War on Teachers is Old School

    Ed Griffin-NolanBy Ed Griffin-NolanMarch 25, 2015Updated:March 25, 2015No Comments4 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    Ed Griffin Nolan
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    For a long time, I have been quite certain that I would be an excellent teacher. For about 45 minutes. After that, I would be a felon.

    To stand before a class as a guest makes you feel good. You feel like you’re contributing to the younger generation. You feel good discharging your civic duty to pass on whatever wisdom or experience that someone, accurately or not, has decided you possess and which holds some value to the students in her charge.

    You do your piece, hope you’ve imparted something worthwhile, and you think you’ve seen in the student’s eyes some signs that maybe you’ve made a difference. Then you walk out the door and the real work begins. You might be tempted, in a moment such as this, to think to yourself: “Hey, I could do this.”

    It’s like that feeling I get when I’m driving up I-81 and switch the radio to a classic rock station, and “Stairway to Heaven” comes on, right in the middle of the song. It’s that moment just when the tempo picks up, and the line which, back in high school, we thought was sung “and there’s a wino in the road,” and I will start tapping the steering wheel and my head will shake quickly back and forth, and I start to sing the lyrics, possibly even getting some of them correct. And since the gods of rock are with me— indeed they love me— I come off the exit ramp at Adams Street and stop at the light and it all comes to a climax just in time for me to sing, in a trembling voice, channeling Robert Plant, the one line even I cannot mangle: “And she’s buy-uy-ing a sta-air-wayay. . .  to hea-a-ven.”

    Did I nail that, or what? The guy behind me beeps his horn. He begs to differ.

    Thinking that we all could handle a classroom full time is that kind of delusion. While not every teacher rises to the level of Jimmy Page, teaching is a skilled profession that requires a master’s degree in New York state.

    Teachers complain of being under attack, that they are under resourced, and most of all, that they are kept from doing their jobs by the twin pressures of high stakes testing and performance evaluations. Many teachers say it has never been this bad before.

    The sad truth is that it has always been so. In her carefully documented history The Teacher Wars: A History of America’s Most Embattled Profession (Doubleday, 2014), author Dana Goldstein demonstrates how, for two centuries, America has liberally heaped expectations and criticism upon those we charge with developing the minds and character of our young. The current fads in education— let business people run the schools, give teachers bonuses if their kids do well on the test —are as old as the one-room schoolhouse, says Goldstein.

    The central critique of our schools today is that teachers are the problem. They earn too much, get too much time off, and worst of all, you can’t get rid of a bad teacher.

    War on Teachers
    Clever modern politicians like Gov. Andrew Cuomo like to have it both ways: He tells us how he loves teachers, he just doesn’t like their unions.

    Clever modern politicians like Gov. Andrew Cuomo like to have it both ways: He tells us how he loves teachers, he just doesn’t like their unions.

    Goldstein also reveals this stubborn fact: Teacher tenure predated unions, and for decades tenure enjoyed bipartisan support, much like Social Security. Her research also indicates that as few as 2 percent of the nation’s 3.3 million public schoolteachers are considered incompetent, a lower percentage than found in other professions.

    As you read Goldstein’s history, you have to wonder: Is it possible that teachers are criticized more harshly because most of them are women?

    Tougher on Women?

    Here’s a comparison that illustrates the point. What happens when corruption or abuse is uncovered in a police department? In law enforcement nationwide, 87 percent of the officers are male. When there is talk of a bad cop, two things happen: Public officials proclaim that it’s just a few bad apples, and stories surface about good, sometimes heroic things the indicted officers have done in the past.

    No one dares to suggest that all cops are crooks, moochers, abusers or worse. Can you imagine Gov. Cuomo riding into town suggesting that police precincts should be run by bankers or that we should pay cops more if they make more arrests?

    Ed Griffin-Nolan is a journalist who believes we have to ask the hard questions no matter whose interests are at stake. Sanity Fair is his weekly take on life, politics and society.


     

     

     

    Ed Griffin-Nolan

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Ed Griffin-Nolan
    Ed Griffin-Nolan

    Senior writer for the Syracuse New Times.

    Related Posts

    Is the U.S. Experiencing a New Online Poker Boom? The Numbers Say Yes

    July 15, 2025

    Under-the-Radar Breakout Candidates for the 2025 NFL Preseason

    June 16, 2025

    Your Guide to Using Telematics Software to Streamline Your Sales and Service Operations

    April 15, 2025

    The Most Common Causes of Manufacturing Downtime & How to Prevent Them

    March 27, 2025

    How Quality Monitoring Reduces Employee Burnout in Call Centers

    March 5, 2025

    A Historical Look at March Madness Champions

    February 26, 2025

    Comments are closed.

    • CNY Events Calendar
    • Club Dates
    • Food & Drink
    • Destinations
    • Sports & Outdoors
    • Family Times
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Community Code of Conduct
    • Staff/Contact Us
    • Careers
    • SALT Academy Applications & Awards Process
    • Family Times
    • CNY Tix
    • Spinnaker Custom Products

    Syracuse New Times
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube Dribbble
    © 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.