The Inundation of
Inexperience
By Jill Jenkins
Historically schools like older
corporations had a hierarchy of teachers
who had worked 20 to 30 years in the industry and young, novice teachers were
added a few at a time. The more experienced
staff mentored the new teachers. Advanced
courses and older grades were taught by the more experienced staff and younger
staff members worked their way up the ladder to succeed them as they retired. The less experienced members of a staff
learned from the more experienced staff members and treated their experience with
respect, but today the majority of faculty members are first and second year
teachers and some have no respect for the experienced staff and no patience to work
their way up the ladder. This is especially true when there is an extraordinary number of inexperienced teachers.
Does this create a problem? According
to the Carnegie Foundation for Advancement of Teaching:
“The high number of
inexperienced teachers in public school classrooms is a largely unrecognized
problem that undermines school stability, slows educational reform, and, new
research suggests, hurts student achievement. These are among the findings of a
report released today by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of
Teaching.”
Teachers do not enter the profession
with all of the skills that are needed to be successful. Many academic programs are designed to
prepare students to teach their subject to like-minded college students, but
middle schools and high schools are filled with students who lack any
motivation or desire to analyze great pieces of literature or compose a
thought-provoking essay. In fact, some won’t
even write their name on their paper, let alone turn it in. Developing ways to motivate these students to
tackle the rigor of the Common Core Curriculum requires the age and wisdom of
teachers who have experience. This is
way mentoring programs are so essential.
Even in the field of medicine, doctors complete their internship and a
residency before they practice medicine independently. Even then, many medical doctors still work
within a team of doctors. It seems unthinkable
that many of these new graduates believe that they can step out of a four-year college
program, enter the teaching field and take over a department.
Ironically, many schools are
choosing to replace older teachers with new college graduates, because administrators
feel that only the newly graduated teachers are familiar with the new teaching
ideas. Many of these teachers arrive
believing that their new ideas are the only sensible ideas and try to foist
their ideas on the department. They are
surprised when more experienced teachers resent their attitudes. They are also
surprised by their students lack of proper behavior in the classroom and their
lack of productivity. Some even become involved in inappropriate relationships with students. This could be avoided if the teachers are provided proper supervision and direction by a more experienced teacher.
Furthermore, many of these new teachers do not stay at a school for longer than one to two years. According to Forbes,” teacher attrition has grown by 50% over the past fifteen years. The national teacher turnover rate has risen 16.8 percent. In urban schools it is over 20 percent, and in some schools and districts, the teacher dropout rate is actually higher than the student dropout rate” (Forbes). Who is leaving the teaching profession? According to National Education Association, thirty percent left because of retirement, but 56% left because of job dissatisfaction or a desire for a new career.” Teaching is a stressful job. Giving new teachers the support of experienced teachers for several years before they a put in the more demanding subjects with the more demanding parents could eliminate some of this stress. School administrator, also, need to address a new teacher who is not teaching the curriculum or not maintaining good classroom control. If it is support the teacher needs, the principal should help the teacher get it. If it is arrogance, the principal should address that appropriately.
Furthermore, many of these new teachers do not stay at a school for longer than one to two years. According to Forbes,” teacher attrition has grown by 50% over the past fifteen years. The national teacher turnover rate has risen 16.8 percent. In urban schools it is over 20 percent, and in some schools and districts, the teacher dropout rate is actually higher than the student dropout rate” (Forbes). Who is leaving the teaching profession? According to National Education Association, thirty percent left because of retirement, but 56% left because of job dissatisfaction or a desire for a new career.” Teaching is a stressful job. Giving new teachers the support of experienced teachers for several years before they a put in the more demanding subjects with the more demanding parents could eliminate some of this stress. School administrator, also, need to address a new teacher who is not teaching the curriculum or not maintaining good classroom control. If it is support the teacher needs, the principal should help the teacher get it. If it is arrogance, the principal should address that appropriately.
Why are districts doing this? Could districts motives include trying to save money on
salaries? Inexperienced teachers earn
are significantly less than experienced teachers and if they leave the
profession before they retire the state and district saves money again. Are schools attempting to save money while
forgetting the most important task, providing a quality education? Many schools and districts have forced older
teachers into retirement by changing their retirement packages and eliminating
access to health insurance. Yes, this saves
money for the district, but is it fair to the teachers who entered into a
contract with the district 25 or 30 years ago only to find that if they don’t
retire now they will lose a portion of their benefits or all of them?
Regardless of the reason, the result
is the same: placing too many first and
second year teachers in one school or one department reduced the chances that
the students will receive a quality education.
Schools need a balance of older, more experienced teacher in each school
and a few inexperienced teachers learning how to become good teachers if we
expect to pass on the torch of high quality education.