Resignation, Red Tape, Renewal
I am voluntarily
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Resigning
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as an employee of the Aurora Public Schools for the following
reasons:
My position at Jewell was eliminated. In
addition, Jewell no longer is a healthy working environment (for teachers or
students) and I would not be able to work there unless we were able to return
to our previous work as an inquiry-based democratic school. We are now a
Relay Leadership School which focuses on teach to the test practices that are
not good for children. Relay Graduate School is run by non-educators and
lacks pedagogy – it is an embarrassment to the teaching profession. It is
unfortunate for Aurora’s children that APS has gone in this direction. It is
also unfortunate for the teachers at Jewell who were forced to implement 100%
compliance models of discipline with continual teaching to the test and
skill/drill. The teachers at Jewell this year (2015-2016) were the most unhappy
teachers I have seen in my 19 years in public education. They wanted to file a
grievance against the principal but were afraid for their jobs. I no longer can
work in such a toxic learning/teaching environment. Aurora unfortunately seems
to be going in the direction of “no excuse” charter models which do not develop
or support the growth of problem solving citizens. Rather, these charter
models, which Relay supports, promote racist practices specifically directed
towards black and brown children in urban diverse schools. These charter
practices promote the school to prison pipeline. I joined APS four years ago
with great hope and excitement because the professional development and respect
for the teaching profession in APS has always been excellent; that is no longer
the case. I am sorry APS has chosen this path. I will miss my colleagues and
the children.
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And so there you have it. I submitted my resignation this summer.
If you are unfamiliar with my story check out my blog at www.pegwithpen.com.
All future postings by me will be funneled through BustED Pencils – together we
are stronger.
I’ve been MIA this summer via social media and pretty much any
methods of contact. And I feel I owe quite a few folks in explanation – so here
it goes. On May 1st I received a phone call that my mother had fallen and
broken both wrists. A social worker at the hospital proceeded to tell me that
my mother would undergo surgery the following day and then be placed in rehab.
My father would be placed in assisted living. My oldest sister (52) with
special needs would be placed in a group home. I said – no way in hell.
I got on a plane to Missouri and remained there all of May taking
care of my family. One day I was completing what I believed would be my last
year of teaching (actually testing) in the public schools and the next day I
was officially done, prematurely, with my teaching career. There were no
goodbyes. Just a void.
In June I returned to Colorado with my family and cared for them
in my home with the help of my husband and my boys until early July. I know a
lot about home health care now. I also know a lot about systems – systems to
support my special needs sister, systems to help the elderly, the injured, and
those with dementia.
Let me give you one example of my new learning. I attempted
to enroll my sister in a day program here in Denver because she is accustomed
to working full-time in Missouri. We had done our best to fill out the
appropriate paperwork. Upon trying to enroll her they told my mother she had
not done all the paperwork. Many of the items she needed to complete the
process sat 12 hours away in a lock box in Missouri. As a result, we would have
to pay a hefty daily fee if my sister was to attend. We decided to try one half
day because she desperately needed the socialization. I dropped her off, and an
hour later had a phone call from one of the staff members stating that my
sister had flipped off the staff and tried to run away. Remember the
kindergartner on the first day of school? Sometimes they throw a fit? This was
the scenario in a sense. She was not invited back. If we had the paperwork
done, they would have been required to adjust and evaluate how to help her
transition into the program. Instead, with a very cold tone, I was politely
told by the director not to come back.
There is red tape everywhere you go. Much of this red tape is
harmful.
In rehab if my mom did not work hard enough, they said she would
have to leave early. If she worked too hard, they would then release her early.
It was a dance via insurance to keep her in as long as necessary to allow her
to recover.
Red tape, connected to money, connected to systems, speaks to a
much more powerful entity, called capitalism, a system that many of us truly do
not understand – specifically in re: to its methods of madness during a crisis.
Trying to muddle through the red tape requires education, money, and privilege.
And this system does not place human beings first. Money and power rules.
Sound familiar?
Families living in poverty often get tripped and slammed to the
ground via this red tape.
And now it’s August. And today would be my first day of work
at Jewell Elementary if my position had not been eliminated. Legally, I
had the option of taking another position that they would “place” me in – ha –
no thanks.
But my adventure, a new life, is just beginning. I have a lot of
plans actually. I can finally write during the day rather than at four in the
morning or midnight. I can continue the tutoring I have done this summer in
which I actually get to teach in a developmentally appropriate, ethically,
morally, passionate, engaging, kind, way. I really wouldn’t even call it
tutoring – I’m simply helping children become empowered as readers and writers
in a world that desperately needs democratic problem-solving citizens. I will
continue my work as an education activist. I am no longer working with United
Opt Out National. I actually have some new activist ventures I am focusing on
that I believe must happen if we have any hopes of regaining public education
for this country – mind you, I anticipate it will take two generations to get
there. It will not be in my lifetime, nor in yours. But I plan to do my part to
keep things moving. We will lose before we will win, this much I know. But when
we lose, and the masses wake up, the ground work will be done to rebuild. I
will do my part. I will be blogging at BustED Pencils now – the only
progressive, revolutionary ed. news media site out there currently – I hope to
make their voice even louder.
I have a lot of feelings about a lot of things right now.
There’s something gut wrenching about having your entire family’s
life turned upside down, while also realizing how lucky you are to have been
able to keep the family intact. Imagine how many families are uprooted as mine
almost was? In a blink of an eye an entire family can be separated. And
privilege is a large part of what saved my family from that catastrophe.
I have a lot of emotions about my career coming to an end. I am
happy to never have to sit silently and listen to leadership spout bullshit
that we have to swallow. I’m ecstatic that my voice can ring loud and clear
now, without getting shoved down to my feet and making its way back out in
violent explosions. I am angry at a system that is immoral, racist and cruel to
children and teachers. I am sad that there was no way to make the headway I
hoped to make in Aurora, working inside the system. I am giddy at never having
to sit in a room listening to a bullshit agenda at the beginning of the year
that includes crap data about nothing of value. I mourn never getting to work
in a school community environment again, as a member of the staff. It was an
honor to be a teacher. It was such an honor to work with such amazing children,
parents, and staff. I’m f%&#ing thrilled to never give another test.
As a literacy interventionist, I taught about 1/3 of the year in 2015-2016 (as
did the teachers). The rest of the year I tested, getting shuffled from room to
room, carrying all my testing material on an old rolling yellow chair from the
70’s.
I am incredibly grateful to be with my family more, as between
teaching and activism, my family lost me for many hours and many days.
I’ll return to social media at some point. And I’ll have more to
share about my new ventures as well. First, let’s get this election done. I am,
of course, voting for Jill Stein. I won’t say I told you so re: Bernie. I think
Chris Hedges sums it up best. I won’t say
anything about ESSA right now either, but I have a lot to say – that will come
later.
Meanwhile, it’s simply August 3rd. It’s still summer for me as I
am not at what should have been my first day of work. I plan to go
outside and work in the garden, tend to my chickens, take my youngest son to
the pool, and maybe I’ll do some writing tonight. For all of that, I am
grateful.
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