Letters
Not Her Experience
The sentiments expressed by Katherine
Boles, Ed.D.’91, on page seven of your
latest magazine (“Full Team Ahead,”
spring 2007) are totally erroneous. I
taught biological sciences for 36 years
and I now substitute every day at my local
high school. In every school in which I
have taught, there have been teachers
of all ages. The young teachers do not
stay for short periods of time. They love
teaching and are dedicated to it. They
do not go into teaching in order to climb
the corporate ladder. They go into teaching
because they care about students and
want to make contributions to society.
Like Boles, my own daughter did not
choose to be a teacher. She is a highpowered
business executive. However,
my son, who went to West Point, does
want to become a teacher eventually.
Why? Because he would love to teach.
Those of us who love teaching have
no desire to go into administration. I
loved being a department chair because
I could mentor young teachers and still
be in the classroom. One knows when
he/she is doing a good job from the appreciation
of the parents, children, and
administration. I am talking about all
parents, not just the affluent ones.
Teaching is a “vibrant” profession and
the changes suggested by Boles are not
necessary. When I achieved my M.A.T.
at Harvard, I was in the internship
program. Others were in the apprenticeship
program where they did practice
teaching supervised by expert teachers. I,
myself, have mentored practice teachers
and new teachers in my department. The
first year of my permanent teaching job,
I was mentored by an older, experienced
teacher. He was not paid for this, but did
it in order to be helpful to a new, young
teacher. The training of “intern” and “assistant”
teachers is accomplished during
one’s education. After that, one is eager
to begin teaching in earnest. It is outrageous
to say, “I guarantee you that these
young people won’t stay teaching if we
don’t change the job.” I repeat that young
people go into teaching because they
love teaching, not because they want to
climb the corporate ladder of success.
Judy Pierce Livingstone, M.A.T.’61
East Dennis, Mass.
Play School
Thank you for your recent article on the
importance of play (“Einstein May Never
Have Used Flashcards, but He Probably
Built Forts,” spring 2007). Kids absolutely
need more unscheduled time and better
designed spaces where they can play. But
schools have an opportunity to help as
well. Too many children come to school
not knowing how to engage in healthy
play. They have not grown up learning
games and don’t know how to resolve
the small disputes that arise when playing
with others during recess. That can
lead to conflict and even fighting for
some. The result is that children only
feel safe on the sidelines, staying out of
harm’s way. Our recent experience at
schools in places like Baltimore, Boston,
and Oakland is that it doesn’t have to
be that way. In each of these schools,
we have been coordinating schoolyard
games like kickball and foursquare, running
afterschool sports programs, while
getting students to have fun and develop
social and leadership skills. Now instead
of recess being a time of chaos, it’s a time
of active learning and positive social
interaction. It’s a reminder to us adults
just how much safe and healthy play can
enhance the overall education experience
for students and teachers alike.
Jill Vialet
founder and executive director, Sports4Kids
Oakland, Calif.
Up Front
Mary Tamer’s “Up Front” comments
(spring 2007) seem to me to be more
about teacher tenure than about improving
instruction in classrooms. As a retired
teacher who spent more than 30 years in
classrooms “up front” with serious and
nonserious students, I am very sensitive
about people questioning tenure.
In New York City, the chancellor of
the school system is a man who was
trained to be a prosecutor, not an educator.
When he was hired, with a special
pass from the state legislature, there
was a pool of at least 32 experienced
community superintendents from which
Mayor Michael Bloomberg could have
picked his school chief. Bloomberg chose
to experiment.
Tenure is more about protecting
teachers from these kinds of political
decisions than it is about weeding out
poor performing teachers. The vast
majority of teachers who cannot perform
well in classrooms are chased out of
the profession by students, not school
administrators.
Tenure gives teachers the opportunity
of enjoying “due process” when they
are being challenged by administrators.
When administrators
have to
follow specific rules
when trying to fire
teachers, they are
less likely to be
arbitrary with their
charges. Tenure
brings fairness to
the firing process.
Without tenure
and teachers unions
to support teachers,
teaching jobs will again become political positions, handed
out to local politicians. Tenure, even at
the university level, is the protection that
allows teachers and professors to speak
their minds. Without tenure, I would not
have been able to speak out during my
more than 30 years in public schools.
When you work “at the pleasure of
the mayor,” as we have seen with many
who worked “at the pleasure of the president,”
you bite your tongue or leave. It is
easy for me to leave now, when my sons
are 42 and 45. It would not have been
easy when they were 10 and 13. Tenure
saved me from a great deal of stress and
frustration.
Louis DeFreitas Sr., Ed.M.’71
Silver Spring, Md.
Thanks to Professor Tom Kane for verifying
with credible research what many
teachers have known for years, that most
of the courses offered by state teacher
training schools do little to improve their
teaching. The most apparent benefit of
these courses appears to be providing
FTEs to support the existence of the
faculty. If there is no need for a year or
two of pedagogy for classroom teachers,
what will the professors do?
Gordon, Kane, and Staiger’s proposed
five-point plan to identify effective
teachers (Brookings paper) meets a
clear need. In my opinion, their fourth
recommendation calling for the establishment
of systems to measure teachers’
job performance relies too
much on state and local
education agencies. I think
it is unlikely to get quality,
objective, thorough, and
credible behavioral research
from these agencies.
More likely, we would find
a tendency to maintain the
status quo.
We need good, hard
research that will help us
improve our school systems
and our children’s lives. Let’s give Professor
Kane our support.
Jim Friet, C.A.S.’60, Ed.D.’62
San Diego, Calif.
Brains, Blocks, and Better Training
Your story “Science Says” (spring
2007) tells us how the developing
brain of a young child thrives and
grows through interaction with
adults (and, I would add, with children).
What a shame to illustrate
it with a baby alone with several
wooden blocks. Both your cover
and the two-page illustration on
pages 16 and 17 are quite misleading.
Young babies don’t need
blocks to help their brains grow.
They need people.
Deborah Baldwin, Ed.M.’87, Ed.D.’92
Dover, Mass.
I’ve often wondered why we don’t take
the time and make the effort to prepare
parents for their most important job
before they become parents. Why not
teach child development, parent responsibility,
positive discipline techniques,
emotional and communication skills,
nutrition, and human development to
all students in high schools and middle
schools? Certainly this is very important
knowledge, as the article points out, not
just for the children who will be born,
but to our country as a whole.
Carol Lewke
Prepare Tomorrow’s Parents organization
Boca Raton, Fla.
We Should Have Known Better
As a June doctoral graduate of the Ed
School, I was extremely disappointed to
read in the first paragraph of “Around
the World in Three Projects” (winter
2006–2007) that the Ed School has a
“Ph.D. student body.” This is incorrect.
No graduate school at Harvard grants
students Ph.D.s except for the Graduate
School of Arts and Sciences. At the Ed
School we are doctoral students, but we
receive Ed.D.s. This is a major distinction.
It is terrible to think that the magazine
of the Ed School would make such
a huge error. Not to mention, it is galling
to the entire past and present doctoral
student body.
Simone Sangster, Ed.M.’02, Ed.D.’07
Boston, Mass.
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