The slump in the economy, coupled with the acrimonious discourse over how much weight test results and seniority should be given in determining a teachers worth, have conspired to bring morale among the nations teachers to its lowest point in more than 20 years, according to a survey of teachers, parents and students released on Wednesday.
More than half of teachers expressed at least some reservation about their jobs, their highest level of dissatisfaction since 1989, the survey found. Also, roughly one in three said they were likely to leave the profession in the next five years, citing concerns over job security, as well as the effects of increased class size and deep cuts to services and programs. Just three years ago, the rate was one in four.
The results, released in the annual MetLife Survey of the American Teacher, expose some of the insecurities fostered by the high-stakes pressure to evaluate teachers at a time of shrinking resources. About 40 percent of the teachers and parents surveyed said they were pessimistic that levels of student achievement would increase in the coming years, despite the focus on test scores as a primary measure of quality of a teachers work.
full here: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/08/education/teacher-morale-sinks-survey-resu lts-show.html?_r=1&hp
------
Did someone on this list claim that parents would not support a campaign focused on teacher support -- and only on teacher support?
I would suggest that _any other focus_ would merely confuse matters. Our task as leftists is to help teachers keep their jobs and help them raise their pay. Other concerns are politically naïve.
When many new and inexperienced people join an anti-war movement, they tend to be nervous; slogans such as "Support the Troops: Bring Them Home" are silly in terms of their political impact; they are no absurd in terms of demonstrator morale. "What about the Kids" is a similarly naïve question that only makes those who ask it feel warm and fuzzy, but it's a movement killer.
Carrol