One teacher’s thoughts

May 3, 2020

This came in from Xavier Miranda:

Good Afternoon Brutus,

For your consideration:
Just a few thoughts on the impact of COVID-19 on our local education system:
The pandemic has revealed how corporate influence on our education system has sorely failed our students. Rather than relying on the expertise of educators, who best know the individual needs of our students, district administrators have been scrambling to replace their experimental technology initiatives that have little pedagogical value. (Prior to the outbreak, our superintendent had already spent $119 million on curriculum initiatives that have proven to be ineffective.)
GIven current circumstances, standards for mastery of content have been lowered, stifling our kids’ creativity and critical analysis, while favoring a one-size-fits-all curriculum.
Consider the following before the imminent transition of our education system to online learning:
1. Students are now limited in their interaction with their teachers, e.g., high school students now see their teachers two to three times a week for an average of 15 minutes per session. The one-on-one exchanges are now minimal, at best. (Our student to teacher ratios are typically 25 to 1; with class loads of thirty-five not uncommon.)
2. Families in areas such as the economically-disadvantaged Chamizal neighborhood, have limited access to WIFI, despite attempts to provide hotspots and laptops. Even when communication companies offer “free” service, such efforts entail having to commit to 1-2 year contracts that are a financial burden for struggling families.
3. In households with multiple children, access to online learning is limited by the bandwidth available. Time and coursework management is left to individual students that already need nurturing in terms of emotional development and skills acquisition.
4. Students designated as Special Education (SPED), Limited English Proficiency (LEP), and Economically Disadvantaged, are the ones bearing the brunt of the transition. Services typically rendered these kids have been restricted, leaving their parents to provide support of which they may not be aptly prepared.
No doubt there will be a push to empower online charter schools, and gradually close public schools after this pandemic runs its course.
Perhaps we need to acknowledge the hypocrisy of current initiatives that claim to address inequities, when in fact, these merely perpetuate them.
This is quite evident in the morass that our healthcare system is in, as a result of similar neoliberal influence on their management and operations.
One can merely look to the lack of coordination of resources, and shortages of PPE and ventilators as examples of a failed business approach to a social service.
Parents, students, and teachers must be included in the design of a post-pandemic education system, rather than those that dismiss notions of civically engaged and critical thinking students.
There are quite a few teachers that are devoted to serving our children, and are eager to step up to the task.
Respectfully,
Xavier Miranda
Teacher

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A few days later he sent this in as an addendum:

Good Afternoon Brutus,

I just wanted to follow up with the following development, and I am wondering if you can include it with my original submission:
The potential layoff of 275,000 teachers looms large; and it doesn’t bode well that our EPISD superintendent is a signatory on the plea to Congress
This pandemic will be the excuse to further decimate our public education system, and lead to more “radical reform,” which really means privatization. Our children will be the ones exploited.
It is essential that we all step up and restore the integrity and purpose of our schools.
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We deserve better
Brutus

Open line Saturday

May 2, 2020

It’s Saturday.

What’s on your mind?

We deserve better

Brutus


We reserve the right to change the rules

May 1, 2020

Here’s another example of government using words that don’t mean what they say:

How can anything interim be final?

We deserve better

Brutus


Another lobbying victory

April 30, 2020

It is unfortunately frequently true that whatever words a government uses to describe something are the opposite of what they are doing.

My favorite example is Internal Revenue Service.  It’s not as though we can write them and tell them that we don’t want their service this year.

Here’s another example:

This is the opposite of transparency.

We deserve better

Brutus


Are clothes next?

April 29, 2020

When did it become our responsibility to feed our neighbor’s children?

The kids aren’t even in school.

EPISD is not unusual–it seems that all of our local school districts are doing this.

In the case of EPISD they are distributing 33,000 meals a day that are free to their students.

Yes the feral government is reimbursing them.

We all know who reimburses the feds.

We deserve better

Brutus