Things Nice People Already Know: Any Teacher Can Tell You Why So Many Are Leaving The Profession

Mamacita says:  It’s been pretty quiet around here lately, so I thought I’d stir things up by re-running a post from September 2007.  It created quite a stir when it first ran; let’s see if anything happens this time around.

Oh, and I still stand by what I’ve said here.  That includes labeling a bratty kid a “brat.”

Most teachers who leave the profession leave because almost all of the attention, most of the perks, most of the privileges, and most of the allowances are given to the students who least deserve it: the disruptive kids. In other words, these loud, bratty, obnoxious kids are being rewarded for their disgusting behavior, so why should they clean up their act? I wouldn’t. Not if doing my own thing meant I’d still get to have and do everything little goody two-shoes next to me got to have and do.

Secondly, many of the parents who are involved with the school are the parents of these same brats. School administrators fear negative PR, and to a principal or superintendent, negative PR is when a loud-mouthed parent with a shitty kid calls the newspaper office. Entitlement is the bane of our society’s existence, and it’s alive and well in our public schools.

“You WILL accept my child and you WILL give him/her a special lunch and you WILL treat him/her on a different level than all these other peon kids and you WILL hold his/her hand and you WILL allow him/her to break any rules we as a family do not believe apply to us. . . .” Lovely mentality, yes?

Or this:

“Trailer for sale or rent, or possibly just someone else’s the family is mooching, no phone, no pool, lots of pets, chain smokin’ beer-guzzlin’ shacked-up, in and out of jail, booze, grass, if that damn school tries to call me one more time I’m goin’ down thar and kick me some ass. . .” Lovely mentality, yes?

Or this:

“My kid will play in that basketball game tonight and I don’t CARE that the rules say a kid who’s failing any subject is ineligible.  Your rules are stupid, because that game is more important that a stupid subject like English or science, and I’ll go straight to the superintendent and school board if I don’t get my own way with this issue.”  Lovely mentality, yes?

What’s even worse is the fact that more often than not, going over the heads of the teacher and principal will all too often give these people their own way.

Me, personally, I think that if there are any perks to be handed out, they should go only to students who have earned them. No earn? No get. Ever.

Why should a student bother to behave himself if he knows he’s going to get a limo ride and a Pizza Hut lunch for bringing a pencil three days in a row? I wouldn’t.

Why would a student exert himself to do any work, or allow anyone else in the classroom to do anything either, if he knows he’s going to be passed to the next grade anyway? Yes, I am a firm believer in holding back any student who can’t do it, won’t do it, or any combination thereof.

I don’t want my tiny second-grade-size daughter seated next to a hulking ballistic cursing disruptive 15-year-old, but if everyone is REQUIRED to behave properly, there wouldn’t be any problems even then, now would there? Because while a student can’t help the “hulking,” there are no viable excuses for being ballistic, cursing, or disruptive. EVER. Any person of any age who behaves in such a way should be removed immediately, not at the end of the day but IMMEDIATELY, escorted out by the police if the parent can’t be reached, and locked away where he/she can no longer deny other children their right to an education. That our schools have lowered themselves to becoming daycare centers for kids who are not required to behave themselves is a national disgrace. The schools who allow it are a disgrace, the parents who allow it are a disgrace, and the kids themselves are a disgrace. That’s right; I’m labeling children. After a certain age, they know how nice people behave. Life is full of choices. CHOICES. Door #1: Thank you for being a nice person who behaves properly. You may stay and be educated, that your life’s choices might increase. Door #2: Are you sure you want this door? Absolutely sure? Very well. Get out and do not set foot near the school grounds ever again. You are bringing down the entire population of students. Good riddance. Billy Madison speech. Door #3: Whine. Scream. Curse. Threaten. Hire a lawyer. Make promises. We don’t care. Get out. And take your obnoxious kid with you.

If only.

In other words, disruptive bratty obnoxious kids are mostly a product of their home.

Teachers who say things like this are few and far between. Not because they aren’t thinking such things 24/7, but because it’s dangerous to speak out. Ethnicity, race, gender, and social levels have nothing whatsoever to do with this issue, but teachers who recognize the actual problem and try to do something about it are often accused of being racist, sexist, un-PC, heartless, “in possession of inappropriate knowledge,” etc. And often the biggest brats belong to the parents with the most political pull.  Just as often, the biggest brats belong to. . . . nobody.  In either case, brats are brats.

In other words, somebody screams “prejudice,” when the truth is, these teachers are speaking truth.

Until the bullies and the disrupters and the violent and the kids who have no respect for learning are removed from our schools, our schools can not be what the free public schools were meant to be: places where all who wish to learn, may learn all they wish.

It’s hard to learn when 25 of the 38 kids in your classroom have important Letters of the Alphabet in their files, prohibiting the teacher from requiring any work or proper behavior. It’s hard to learn when it’s so loud you can’t hear yourself think, and that awful boy next to you keeps stealing your stuff and hitting you on the arm and laughing. He can’t help it, poor thing, it’s in his IEP that nobody may do anything that would lower his self-esteem.  I do not believe that ANY child who is disruptive or violent for any reason should be allowed to prevent other children from learning.  Inclusion will only work for students who work at it.

On the first day of school, let the few simple rules be known and let the penalties for disregarding the rules be known. Let there be no exceptions to these penalties. Require a signed document from every family, admitting understanding of these policies. Require an additional signature under the paragraph that spells out the “no exceptions” policy. From Day One, Period One, expect and require good behavior from all students. Instantly remove any kid that chooses to be an ass. Ass-behavior is always a personal choice.

No document from home? No privileges for the kid. Not until it’s signed and filed in the office. Several copies, and one to the superintendent. Why should the child be penalized because the parents can’t get their act together for thirty seconds to sign a damn paper? Because that’s the only way some people can be persuaded to do much of anything. Life is hard. What if some parents don’t LIKE some of these rules? Enroll your overprivileged kid somewhere else then, losers.

Where should these kids be removed to? To be perfectly honest, I don’t care. Just get them away from the good kids. Don’t good kids have rights, too? I’m sick and tired of disruptive kids having the most rights. SICK AND TIRED of it. It’s long past time to give the majority of attention and all things positive to kids who choose to behave properly and kids who want to learn.

This is why most teachers who leave while still young, leave.  If you are not a teacher, it’s hard to comprehend the heartbreak these teachers feel: they love their students; they love teaching; they love every single thing about their jobs. . . except for the fact that they are required to endure  what nobody else in any other profession would ever consider enduring.  They’re required to watch the bright and promising students injured and taunted and threatened by “other kinds” of students, and they’re required to see those “other kinds” of students rewarded for things the nice kids do daily.  They’re required to give exceptions to the undeserving and nothing to the deserving.  After a while, their nerves are shot and their own self-esteem is in the dirt.  Decisions they make are overturned, their authority is questioned and shot full of holes.  Daily.  They’re not paid enough to put up with this crap. Nobody is.  This kind of thing should not even EXIST in our public schools.  In the olden days, students were expected to behave and required to behave, and any kid who chose to “act up” got punished at school and punished again at home for disgracing the family.  Kids who continued to “act up” were expelled.  Life is full of choices.

I taught public school for 26 years and my salary peaked out at 49,300. After 26 years. It became sooo not worth it. A hundred thou a year would not have been worth it.  The constant disruptions, the constant expectations that certain kids would not be held accountable, the constant accusations of favoritism and wrongdoing and the 23-minute lunch at 10:30 a.m. and the study hall with 48 non-participatory boys, many of whom had to sit on the floor because the room was too small for that many desks, the indignant parents who demanded. . . actually, demanded ANYTHING. Nice people do not DEMAND. And if someone is DEMANDING an exception, he/she is not a nice person.  Teachers don’t leave because of the money.  People don’t become teachers for the money.  People become teachers because of the dedication and the love, and teachers leave because there is absolutely no support any more.

When teachers walk out the door, they don’t usually do it because they hated teaching. They do it because the peripherals made it impossible to be a teacher. In some schools, administrators don’t even call their instructors “teachers” any more. It’s “facilitators” now. That’s because we are no longer allowed to really teach. We spend most of our time trying to maintain order in overcrowded rooms full of disruptive kids who don’t want to be there and don’t want to learn and don’t intend to allow YOUR child to learn, either. Why do we put up with it? WHY?

I make not quite 16,000 now, and even though we’re one sheet of cardboard away from living in a cardboard box under a bridge, I’m far, far better off. Why is that? Because teaching is what I love, eager students are who I love, and now I can do what I was meant to do without putting up with disruptive students or parents who demand exceptions.  And when a student gives us any kind of disruptive behavior at this level and refuses to leave, we call the cops.

It took me almost a full year to ‘catch on’ to the fact that I no longer had to ‘deal’ with that kind of behavior any more. It comes as quite a surprise to some students that after a certain level, disruptive behavior is no longer allowed. After a certain level, the facilitators no longer allow it on the facility.

Perhaps if our students were taught that lesson in fourth grade, we wouldn’t have any obnoxious hoods keeping our good kids from learning in any of the higher grades.

In a perfect world.

Yes, I mean every word of this post. Some of you will find fault with the fact that I do not believe our nation’s schools and our nation’s children should be required to put up with disruptive and violent behaviors. After all, some of those kids can’t help it. And so they can’t. Get them away from the other kids because frankly, anything that prevents the good kids from learning doesn’t belong there. Tolerance? I’m all for it. How about some of that for the good kids, too!

I do not believe that all of the disruptive students are Special Education material, either. Our Special Ed programs are usually excellent, taught by the most dedicated teachers of all, overcrowded, underappreciated, and too full of kids who don’t belong there, which takes those teachers’ time and attention away from the kids who DO belong there.

An IEP does not take the place of discipline. Sure, it’s easier to claim that your child has Authority Defiance Syndrome than to require good behavior and enforce the rules yourself. Quick fix for Mom and Dad, huh.  These people are taking time and attention away from kids who genuinely need and deserve special treatment.

We as a nation had better be very, very careful about what kind of behaviors we tolerate and even encourage with stupid reward systems for behaviors that ALL students should be practicing daily, because it’s already happening that many people are trying to enter the workforce without the necessary skills. Some of these people were busy texting and checking their email on their cell phones instead of paying attention, sure; I hate those people, too. But some of these people graduated with good grades that mean almost nothing because their teachers were so busy trying to corral the wild animals in their classrooms and keep them from actually harming the good kids, so busy trying to placate parents who expected the schools to not only feed, clothe, and babysit before and after hours but also to teach the behaviors and manners that are actually the responsibility of the parents, that at the end of the long, long day, there simply wasn’t time to teach anything. The schools should not be responsible for teaching your child to behave properly. If that is what you’re counting on, forget it. It’s not going to happen, parents. That’s YOUR job. I know you’re busy, but if you’re too busy to raise your child, perhaps you’d best be thinking about letting somebody else do it, not the school.

I’ll say this again: If an adult can afford cigarettes and beer and DOG FOOD, that adult should be able to buy socks and jeans and a hot lunch for his child. I’d say, the child should come before ANY of those other things. When those free-lunch, free books, free before-and-after-school-care parents would stand before me, reeking of smoke, whining with their beer-breath that they just plum couldn’t afford no shoes for the child, cough cough cough reek, it was all I could do not to tell them off for being just generally bad, bad people. Bad people who bought cigarettes, beer, dog food, and shoes for themselves instead of taking decent care of their child.

There are no exaggerations in this post. If your child’s classroom is a place of calm, peace, cool, and learning, please fall on your knees and thank God or your lucky stars, whichever one rows your boat, because your child’s school is an exception.

I’m not kidding, either. I only wish I were.

PLEASE do not assume that I am attacking special students here; that is NOT the case at all.  I am merely saying that no student who keeps another student from learning should be allowed placement in a regular education classroom.  Our public schools, bad as so many of them are, are still one of the main reasons many immigrants come to our country; it’s too late for them, but they have hopes for their children.  Without education, there can be no hope. Without education, people are easily fooled, easily led, and somehow less of a person.  Educated people are the hope of everyone’s future.

That’s why it’s so important to make sure that our public schools are places where students can be educated, without disruption, without fear, without “putting up with” anything that interferes with that education.  That so many students fear for their very lives when they go to school is a sad commentary on our society.  That those who give other students just cause to be afraid are tolerated is a disgrace.  Those who sanction it are the biggest disgrace of all.

Are we really so afraid of harming the self-esteem of a thug, or a bully, or anyone who puts another at risk or in any way prevents another from advancing forward in knowledge, that we have shunted the deserving to the back burner, and expect them to be content with the dregs of our energy and resources?

Apparently we are.

The following is from “Scripts for Schools;” it’s a Reader’s Theater script, and it looks pretty good to me!  The picture above is from this site, also.  Thank you, Lois Walker.

Pushing, pulling, picking on,

Hitting, holding, sitting on,

Punching, poking, spitting on,

THAT’S WHAT BULLIES DO!

And sometimes they invade your space

And sometimes grab your pencil case

And leave you feeling out of place.

THAT’S WHAT BULLIES DO!

And we are putting up with this nonsense. . . why?  I don’t know.  Does anybody?  A GOOD reason, I mean?

I think we are so busy paying attention to bad people that we ignore the nice people. Villains have more rights than their victims.  This is unacceptable, and unethical.


Comments

Things Nice People Already Know: Any Teacher Can Tell You Why So Many Are Leaving The Profession — 37 Comments

  1. I think that nailed it down for me. I’ve just gone through this exact set of thoughts, after being ‘mauled’ by a ‘pack’ of (female) students who don’t want to work, as they get all priveleges, don’t need the money, so have no drive to learn; yet, cause all others hell to pay if they are made to feel they must sort out their disgraceful bratty behaviour. The innocent made to pay twice, for their virtues. I will be sending this permalink out to a few of my close friends with the words, ‘this is my lot right now’… bless you. Loved this post absolutely.

  2. I just saw this post. As a someone who has 5 years in the educational field, I am seriously thinking about getting out of the profession. I came into teaching because I wanted to help bring up the next generation, make a difference, and give back what my wonderful teachers gave to me. Currently, I am a temporary 5th grade teacher and though I been on the job for about a month, it has been nothing but pure hell. I have a small group of students that are real bullies, disrupt class, disrespectful to me and their peers, and my heart breaks for the students who have a desire to learn. I have stop instructional time because I have to deal with the behaviors. I discipline, I document, call home, but to no avail. Really, it has taken a toll on my physically, mentally, and emotionally; so much so, I dread coming to work, cry during the drive there, and really doubting myself if I am cut out for this profession. I wish there was something that we could do to save our schools from this intimidation.

  3. I just saw this post. As a someone who has 5 years in the educational field, I am seriously thinking about getting out of the profession. I came into teaching because I wanted to help bring up the next generation, make a difference, and give back what my wonderful teachers gave to me. Currently, I am a temporary 5th grade teacher and though I been on the job for about a month, it has been nothing but pure hell. I have a small group of students that are real bullies, disrupt class, disrespectful to me and their peers, and my heart breaks for the students who have a desire to learn. I have stop instructional time because I have to deal with the behaviors. I discipline, I document, call home, but to no avail. Really, it has taken a toll on my physically, mentally, and emotionally; so much so, I dread coming to work, cry during the drive there, and really doubting myself if I am cut out for this profession. I wish there was something that we could do to save our schools from this intimidation.

  4. I’m dreading going to work tomorrow because of the handful of brats in my elementary classroom, the worst group I’ve had. The only reason I keep going back is for the “nice” kids who are willing to learn something. But dealing with the brats takes such a toll on me emotionally and mentally (not to mention the lost instructional time) that I feel like I have nothing left to give to the nice, deserving kids. I feel sorry for the brats, too, because many of them have lousy home situations and/or have lived through hell, but they need so much more than what I can give them. I feel very discouraged. Many of my colleagues are on anti-depressants, and is it any wonder? Some teachers deal with these pressures by going numb, others by quitting the profession, others with medication… me, I just cry and look for articles on the internet. As schools go, mine does a comparatively decent job of dealing with discipline issues… but even so, there’s a limit to how much true support I have. Ultimately it’s my problem to “manage”. I feel so alone. Reading this article gave me some encouragement that somebody understands. Thank you.

  5. I’m dreading going to work tomorrow because of the handful of brats in my elementary classroom, the worst group I’ve had. The only reason I keep going back is for the “nice” kids who are willing to learn something. But dealing with the brats takes such a toll on me emotionally and mentally (not to mention the lost instructional time) that I feel like I have nothing left to give to the nice, deserving kids. I feel sorry for the brats, too, because many of them have lousy home situations and/or have lived through hell, but they need so much more than what I can give them. I feel very discouraged. Many of my colleagues are on anti-depressants, and is it any wonder? Some teachers deal with these pressures by going numb, others by quitting the profession, others with medication… me, I just cry and look for articles on the internet. As schools go, mine does a comparatively decent job of dealing with discipline issues… but even so, there’s a limit to how much true support I have. Ultimately it’s my problem to “manage”. I feel so alone. Reading this article gave me some encouragement that somebody understands. Thank you.

  6. I found your post today through another blog. It touched my heart profoundly! I agree with every word.
    After 15 years, I left education, and job that I loved, for many of the same reasons that you stated, plus a few more! It makes me sick to see what is happening in our schools these days. I finally reached a point where I couldn’t be a part of it anymore.
    Good for you for having the courage to speak out! I tried, as I was leaving, but most of what I said seemed to fall on deaf ears.

  7. I found your post today through another blog. It touched my heart profoundly! I agree with every word.
    After 15 years, I left education, and job that I loved, for many of the same reasons that you stated, plus a few more! It makes me sick to see what is happening in our schools these days. I finally reached a point where I couldn’t be a part of it anymore.
    Good for you for having the courage to speak out! I tried, as I was leaving, but most of what I said seemed to fall on deaf ears.

  8. >>When teachers walk out the door, they don’t usually do it because they hated teaching. They do it because the peripherals made it impossible to be a teacher.<<

    This line is GOLD. I left after 21 years in an inner city high school just for this reason. I loved to go into the classroom and TEACH, but it was getting too hard to get the stuff and the kids that I needed to teach. Fortunately, I had the years and the age so that I could retire with full benefits. Not much of a pension, but the benefits is worth GOLD.

  9. >>When teachers walk out the door, they don’t usually do it because they hated teaching. They do it because the peripherals made it impossible to be a teacher.<<

    This line is GOLD. I left after 21 years in an inner city high school just for this reason. I loved to go into the classroom and TEACH, but it was getting too hard to get the stuff and the kids that I needed to teach. Fortunately, I had the years and the age so that I could retire with full benefits. Not much of a pension, but the benefits is worth GOLD.

  10. I realize that this post is older and it is entirely possible that my comment may never be read. However, I couldn’t resist. I have been teaching for 12 years. I really appreciate your post because of this quote: “Teachers who say things like this are few and far between. Not because they aren’t thinking such things 24/7, but because it’s dangerous to speak out.”

    I have recently made the decision to take steps to pursue a career outside the classroom because I am tired of the student behavior and feeling that there is nothing I can do. I can jump through all the hoops, make all the documentation and it makes no difference. I had a student threat against me and the student denied it and got a slap on the wrist and are back in the classroom. . .

    As I told my Asst. Principal, if I treated the students the way they treat me and the other staff, I’d be fired. He agreed. . .

    Until public schools can remove students more easily and reward the good students, we will continue to see it decline. Schools are a reflection of the society. As the family has declined, so have the schools. Until parents step up and do their job, this will continue to be the case.

  11. I realize that this post is older and it is entirely possible that my comment may never be read. However, I couldn’t resist. I have been teaching for 12 years. I really appreciate your post because of this quote: “Teachers who say things like this are few and far between. Not because they aren’t thinking such things 24/7, but because it’s dangerous to speak out.”

    I have recently made the decision to take steps to pursue a career outside the classroom because I am tired of the student behavior and feeling that there is nothing I can do. I can jump through all the hoops, make all the documentation and it makes no difference. I had a student threat against me and the student denied it and got a slap on the wrist and are back in the classroom. . .

    As I told my Asst. Principal, if I treated the students the way they treat me and the other staff, I’d be fired. He agreed. . .

    Until public schools can remove students more easily and reward the good students, we will continue to see it decline. Schools are a reflection of the society. As the family has declined, so have the schools. Until parents step up and do their job, this will continue to be the case.

  12. I think we are so busy paying attention to bad people that we ignore the nice people. Villains have more rights than their victims.

    At which point, why be one of “the nice people”, i.e. Suckers?

    As one of the “bad kids”, not only do you get to do anything you want (i.e. Anything), you get all the goodies, too. You’re even “entitled” to more goodies than the suckers because of those Important Letters of the Alphabet in your file.

    So the lesson is clear: Be a villain. Be a bully. Be a parasite. Be the REAL top of the food chain.

  13. I think we are so busy paying attention to bad people that we ignore the nice people. Villains have more rights than their victims.

    At which point, why be one of “the nice people”, i.e. Suckers?

    As one of the “bad kids”, not only do you get to do anything you want (i.e. Anything), you get all the goodies, too. You’re even “entitled” to more goodies than the suckers because of those Important Letters of the Alphabet in your file.

    So the lesson is clear: Be a villain. Be a bully. Be a parasite. Be the REAL top of the food chain.

  14. Oh, Mamacita! We’re looking for a good Super in Nashville–come on down and apply!

    NO WAY would you get it…you make entirely too much sense.

  15. Oh, Mamacita! We’re looking for a good Super in Nashville–come on down and apply!

    NO WAY would you get it…you make entirely too much sense.

  16. You are so right that many teachers think this and are afraid to say it. As a special ed teacher, I also agree with your views on special ed students. Just because they have a disability does not preclude them from following rules. We are supposed to be preparing these students for the real world and the real world laws apply to all people regardless of a disability. If they are so disruptive that learning can’t take place, then they need to be removed to a more restrictive environment. Our school district has also been checking to make sure students qualify for special ed services if their disability interferes with their academic learning. This means they do not recieve special ed services if they have a behavior disorder or oppositional deviant behavior that does not interfere with academic achievement. We need to expect and require all students to follow the rules.Thank you for sharing your post!

  17. You are so right that many teachers think this and are afraid to say it. As a special ed teacher, I also agree with your views on special ed students. Just because they have a disability does not preclude them from following rules. We are supposed to be preparing these students for the real world and the real world laws apply to all people regardless of a disability. If they are so disruptive that learning can’t take place, then they need to be removed to a more restrictive environment. Our school district has also been checking to make sure students qualify for special ed services if their disability interferes with their academic learning. This means they do not recieve special ed services if they have a behavior disorder or oppositional deviant behavior that does not interfere with academic achievement. We need to expect and require all students to follow the rules.Thank you for sharing your post!

  18. I didn’t have problems with hyperactive parents, but the discipline problems were the main reason I quit teaching.

    Honestly, I think you go too far in this post. But I can certainly empathize with your feelings, and you say quite a few important and valuable things.

  19. I didn’t have problems with hyperactive parents, but the discipline problems were the main reason I quit teaching.

    Honestly, I think you go too far in this post. But I can certainly empathize with your feelings, and you say quite a few important and valuable things.

  20. That is the reason I stopped teaching. I had too many brats and not enough support. I had kids who would swear at me and each other. I would send them to the office for serious behavior, but the administration just let them come back the next day. I left, assuming I could get another job, but I have not yet been able to. I left a job I really wanted because of the inability to help those kids who needed it. Now I have a just over minimum wage job and have to live with relatives. That is hard with a wife and two (three in a couple months) kids to care for. I can help any kid pass the WASL–that is easy–but the kid has to want to him- or herself and the environment has to be free from disrupters.

  21. That is the reason I stopped teaching. I had too many brats and not enough support. I had kids who would swear at me and each other. I would send them to the office for serious behavior, but the administration just let them come back the next day. I left, assuming I could get another job, but I have not yet been able to. I left a job I really wanted because of the inability to help those kids who needed it. Now I have a just over minimum wage job and have to live with relatives. That is hard with a wife and two (three in a couple months) kids to care for. I can help any kid pass the WASL–that is easy–but the kid has to want to him- or herself and the environment has to be free from disrupters.

  22. As a former teacher (band director/music) I can completely agree with this. Too many times the disruptive students would ruin any enjoyment of the job. Principals always say document, document, document, but when nothing happens after 4-5 times you kind of lose your faith that anything will. I held the kids accountable and got fed up with parents enabling bad behavior. The phrase “not my kid” comes to mind readily. For now I’m happy being a Stay at Home dad. I’m not sure I’ll go back to teaching. Great post!

  23. As a former teacher (band director/music) I can completely agree with this. Too many times the disruptive students would ruin any enjoyment of the job. Principals always say document, document, document, but when nothing happens after 4-5 times you kind of lose your faith that anything will. I held the kids accountable and got fed up with parents enabling bad behavior. The phrase “not my kid” comes to mind readily. For now I’m happy being a Stay at Home dad. I’m not sure I’ll go back to teaching. Great post!

  24. What broke my heart when I taught in a rough elementary school with 6 children with disciplinary problems in my class of 24 (one that required police removal occasionally) was a little girl named Janet who came to school every day, folded her hands on her desk and looked into my eyes anxious to learn everything she could. I wanted to pluck her out of that mess and put her in a place that could live up to her high hopes because I knew I couldn’t in that place.

  25. What broke my heart when I taught in a rough elementary school with 6 children with disciplinary problems in my class of 24 (one that required police removal occasionally) was a little girl named Janet who came to school every day, folded her hands on her desk and looked into my eyes anxious to learn everything she could. I wanted to pluck her out of that mess and put her in a place that could live up to her high hopes because I knew I couldn’t in that place.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *