“Today I resigned from the school board.” From Teacher
Wendy Bradshaw PhD
Posted
on October 23, 2015 by Poetic Justice
Teacher Wendy Bradshaw PhD from
Florida handed in her resignation letter today. Her letter speaks the unspoken
words of thousands of professional educators across the country. Her letter is
the cry of what is in the hearts of teachers who, also, can no longer harm the
children.
Please share her words so just
maybe, we can once again have schools that love and tenderly care for the
well-being of our most precious gifts – our children and grandchildren.
#DoNoHarm
“Today I resigned from the school
board. I would like to share with you what I gave them. Feel free to share it
if it strikes you as important.
To: The School
Board of Polk County, Florida
I love
teaching. I love seeing my students’ eyes light up when they grasp a new
concept and their bodies straighten with pride and satisfaction when they
persevere and accomplish a personal goal. I love watching them practice being
good citizens by working with their peers to puzzle out problems, negotiate
roles, and share their experiences and understandings of the world. I wanted
nothing more than to serve the students of this county, my home, by teaching
students and preparing new teachers to teach students well. To this end, I
obtained my undergraduate, masters, and doctoral degrees in the field of
education. I spent countless hours after school and on weekends poring over
research so that I would know and be able to implement the most appropriate and
effective methods with my students and encourage their learning and positive
attitudes towards learning. I spent countless hours in my classroom
conferencing with families and other teachers, reviewing data I collected, and
reflecting on my practice so that I could design and differentiate instruction
that would best meet the needs of my students each year. I not only love
teaching, I am excellent at it, even by the flawed metrics used up until this
point. Every evaluation I received rated me as highly effective.
Like many other
teachers across the nation, I have become more and more disturbed by the
misguided reforms taking place which are robbing my students of a
developmentally appropriate education. Developmentally appropriate practice is
the bedrock upon which early childhood education best practices are based, and
has decades of empirical support behind it. However, the new reforms not only
disregard this research, they are actively forcing teachers to engage in
practices which are not only ineffective but actively harmful to child
development and the learning process. I am absolutely willing to back up these
statements with literature from the research base, but I doubt it will be asked
for. However, I must be honest. This letter is also deeply personal. I just
cannot justify making students cry anymore. They cry with frustration as they
are asked to attempt tasks well out of their zone of proximal development. They
cry as their hands shake trying to use an antiquated computer mouse on a ten
year old desktop computer which they have little experience with, as the
computer lab is always closed for testing. Their shoulders slump with defeat as
they are put in front of poorly written tests that they cannot read, but must
attempt. Their eyes fill with tears as they hunt for letters they have only
recently learned so that they can type in responses with little hands which are
too small to span the keyboard.
The children
don’t only cry. Some misbehave so that they will be the ‘bad kid’ not the
‘stupid kid’, or because their little bodies just can’t sit quietly anymore, or
because they don’t know the social rules of school and there is no time to
teach them. My master’s degree work focused on behavior disorders, so I can say
with confidence that it is not the children who are disordered. The disorder is
in the system which requires them to attempt curriculum and demonstrate
behaviors far beyond what is appropriate for their age. The disorder is in the
system which bars teachers from differentiating instruction meaningfully, which
threatens disciplinary action if they decide their students need a five minute
break from a difficult concept, or to extend a lesson which is exceptionally
engaging. The disorder is in a system which has decided that students and
teachers must be regimented to the minute and punished if they deviate. The
disorder is in the system which values the scores on wildly inappropriate
assessments more than teaching students in a meaningful and research based
manner.
On June 8, 2015
my life changed when I gave birth to my daughter. I remember cradling her in
the hospital bed on our first night together and thinking, “In five years you
will be in kindergarten and will go to school with me.” That thought should
have brought me joy, but instead it brought dread. I will not subject my child
to this disordered system, and I can no longer in good conscience be a part of
it myself. Please accept my resignation from Polk County Public Schools.
Best,
Wendy Bradshaw, Ph.D.”
Wendy Bradshaw, Ph.D.”
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