On Education

Is Teach for America Costing Experienced Teachers Their Jobs?

July 31, 2009 RSS Feed Print
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Teach for America, the alternative route to certification that places some of the brightest college graduates in the nation's neediest schools, has grown steadily in recent years, despite the recession and state budget crises. But it's starting to get some flak from critics, who say it's forcing more experienced teachers out of their jobs, USA Today reports.

No studies have been done that substantiate the alleged trend, but the argument voiced by some critics is that the program's growth—about 7,300 young people are expected to teach under its banner in 2009-10, up from 6,200 for the 2008-09 school year—comes at the expense of veteran teachers who are losing their jobs to make room for the recruits.

In Boston, TFA corps members replaced 20 pink-slipped teachers, Boston Teachers Union President Richard Stutman told USA Today. "These are people who have been trained, who are experienced, and who have good evaluations, and are being replaced by brand-new employees," he said.

Stutman says that he met with 18 other local union presidents this month and that all of them reported seeing teachers laid off to accommodate TFA hires, who enter the classroom at beginners' salary levels with TFA-underwritten training.

And in March, Peter Gorman, the superintendent of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg school system in North Carolina laid off hundreds of teachers but spared 100 TFAers because the district had "made a commitment to the program," he told USA Today.

TFA responded that it's a "mistaken notion" that corps members are displacing older teachers.

"In every region where we send teachers, we're just one source," says Kerci Marcello, a TFA spokeswoman. Corps members must interview for jobs in the districts where they are placed, just like anyone else.

John Wilson, executive director of the National Education Association, the country's largest teachers union, takes the same position as Stutman and Gorman. In a memo in May 2008, Wilson said union leaders were beginning to see districts lay off teachers and then hire TFA members because of contracts the school systems had signed. He contends TFA hurts children by putting the "least prepared" and "least experienced" teachers in their classrooms.

But supporters see TFA's growth as a positive for low-income children. The nonprofit recruitment organization received 2,500 applicants when it was founded in 1990; this year it has received 35,000, including applications from 11 percent of seniors at Ivy League schools. TFA founder Wendy Kopp maintains that the program is mobilizing passionate individuals dedicated to changing the fact that where a child is born in the United States greatly determines his or her chances for success.

 

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education,
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I have been in teaching for 17 years and possess two Master degrees; 7 years teaching high school and 10 years as a college adjunct. Falling on hard times, as so many are, I applied for Teach for America and was promptly rejected. I think they just want young kids out college. Cheap labor from young people who can be persuaded to put up with a lot of crap for very little pay. I'm actually glad I didn't get accepted. I would not have fit their mold. We really are experiencing the Walmartinization of education industries. It's been happening in the colleges for some time now. What really blows my mind and is so socially irresponsible is that the quality of education is reduced to the point where we are not teaching young people much. The college students I teach know very little about anything academic because for the past 12 years they have been in a baby sitting facility that is some sort of remnant of a nineteenth century education system designed to assimilate immigrants and prepare them for industrial work. What I am saying is that it is disgusting that we live in a world run by thugs that only care about the bottom line. The long-term results are that we end up with dummied down curricula and students who go through 12 years of school and don’t even know how to form a proper paragraph, or in many cases write a sentence correctly. So many are unprepared for college and life in general. I’m no fan of Obama but God help us if those tea party republicans get more power. We might as well board up the schools. One more thing; I forgot to mention that I’m 50 years old. Just wanting a little feedback; do you think I was discriminated against by Teach for America? Just Curious on what others might say. Good luck out there. Dona nobis pa cem.

Jim of AZ 5:00AM March 02, 2012

Use only American teachers and put trouble youth in the military.

School is for people, who want to learn, and should be a safe place, but it is not, no matter where you live or economic status. Remember Columbine? Wilmett? Get out of other people's countries and spend that "WAR" money to educate your own. When America is dead, the parasites will find another foolish country, who will put foreigners before their own citizens.

Acajudi of IL 10:26PM March 21, 2010

To all who read this, what I am about to say will astound you, but it is a true. At first, you will say this guy is crazy, but then you will investigate it, and find I am right.

Teach for America is part of a big social engineering project led by the Neo Liberal (social justice thru market solutions) anti-union forces in America and their D.C. politicians they have bought. Check, you'll see Carol Penner-Walton (of anti-union Walmart) is on the board. Check the Board affiliations of all of them, almost all are charter people.

Teach for America candidates (who use and "alternative" credentialing process to get around NCLB) are hired to break the teachers union nationally. The private charters need them, that's why they need so many, to replace the public school teachers. The huge increase in number of private charter schools operated by EMO's, Education Maintenance Organizations, corresponds well to the subsequent rise in Teach for America recruiting. NCLB allows them to close down a school, open up private charter, bring in Teach for America grads.

I'm sure the Teach for America are fine young men and women. Some fresh blood is good, but they are all pawns in a much bigger plan to bust the teacher's unions in America. They are just the scabs that are going to do it, they just don't know it. Worse yet, neither do the teachers. It's so well planned, so far into it, and so brilliantly executed. Teachers still don't see it coming. The ultimate blindside. It's so Orwellian, I'm almost afraid to send this. They should call them "Teach for Walmart". There, I coined the term first.

ScrappyDoo of DC 4:52AM January 07, 2010

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