Florida

Putting Education Reform To The Test

The Things College Doesn’t Tell You About Teaching

WUSF reporter -- and future teacher -- Yoselis Ramos.

Editor’s Note: This is a first-person story from WUSF reporter Yoselis Ramos, who is studying to become a teacher. She recently hopped a bus with other teachers to attend a Jacksonville town hall meeting.

Along the way she spoke with her fellow travelers about what its like to lead a classroom.

You can watch “American Graduate: Teacher Town Hall” tonight at 9 on WUSF TV.

I was hoping the trip would give me insight into what it’s really like to stand up in front of a class and teach. I’m only a sophomore in college- I still have time to change my mind. I wanted to make sure this is what I want to do.

So I boarded a charter bus with 30 Tampa-area teachers.

It wasn’t long before I was hearing about their frustrations — such as spending the last two hours each evening grading papers. And it sure wasn’t hard to keep the teachers talking.

Once we made it to WJCT studios in Jacksonville, about two hundred teachers filled up the studio.

The teachers had a theme — they didn’t have enough…. Enough options, enough resources, enough parent involvement. And don’t get teachers started on standardized testing. That’s something they’ve had enough of.

After the taping, Pierce Middle School teacher Desiree Jackson said it’s about time teachers are heard.

“What we say and what we feel counts because the things that are going on in society and in legislation as if we’re not competent, all kinds of negative things are coming towards us as if we’re not valuable to society.”

Jackson says “school choice” shouldn’t just be for parents — teachers need to have choices, too.

“Keeping the same objectives but some voice in the choices; in the textbooks, in the types of testing, in the way the material is used, in the pacing… some of those things we need back.”

For someone with a classroom in her future, I still had questions. Cynthia McBride from Tallahassee was ready with answers.

“Love the children, get to know your child,” she told me. “Get to know the students because if they don’t have a respect for you then they hear nothing that you have to say. You’ve got to embrace them.

“See school doesn’t teach you that.”

On the trip back home, I stared out the window and thought do I still wanna do this?

I learned there’s no magical solution to the problems in education. Lots of these problems will still exist when I have my own classroom.

But despite the struggles, these teachers spoke with passion in their voices… I  know I carry that same passion and I’ve realized that’s exactly what I need to overcome these challenges.

You can hear the rest of the teachers tonight on the program ‘American Graduate: Teacher Town Hall’ on WUSF TV at 9pm.

Comments

About StateImpact

StateImpact seeks to inform and engage local communities with broadcast and online news focused on how state government decisions affect your lives.
Learn More »

Economy
Education