“We
have met the enemy and he is us.” Walt
Kelly
As we start a new year in this
rapidly-advancing Age of Technology, the Belize National Teachers’ Union is
once more trying to “raise awareness on key national issues”, and is “seeking
justice for the work that teachers do”.
Thinking along those same lines, to raise awareness and seek justice, I
wonder what classrooms in Belize
today would look like if the powerful school policymakers from the Ministry of
Education and Education Department were brave enough to switch places with
teachers and school administrators for a day.
Likewise, some teachers could also switch places with students for just
one day. Switching places in the
classrooms between Education policymakers and teachers, if only for one day,
would provide an eye-opening opportunity for policymakers to
understand what really happens in classrooms everyday vs. what they think or
expect happens in classrooms everyday.
Likewise, it might be quite eye-opening for our very hard-working
teachers to also experience first-hand what many students deal with everyday in the
classrooms in 2014. After all, students
throughout Belize
today also need to know who “gat yu back” (“has you covered”).
I strongly believe that a one
day switch between Education policymakers and teachers could serve to encourage
the “powers that be” to want to look for more productive ways to help teachers
challenge students today to learn. After
all, a fair salary for teachers is but one of many other valid reasons for the
current BNTU impasse at the negotiating table with the government’s Ministry of
Education. The “teacher for a day” experience
might also open stubbornly and tightly-closed eyes to appreciate just how
difficult it is today for teachers to motivate and enable students (all levels)
to effectively learn. This experience could also
show MOE policymakers why many Primary and Secondary students in Belize ’s
classrooms today do not or cannot learn/master so many parts of a curriculum
that is totally non-Belizean, and offers no value to them. Perhaps, after a one day MOE switch with teachers,
BNTU officials may never again have to
ask the Minister of Education, “…weh happen to you, weh happen to you”.
Before
making the one day switch, however, I would encourage policymakers and
administrators as well as teachers to review Strengthening the Balance, Part II (Leaders) to review key goals that both students and
teachers should concentrate on each day while in school in order to keep fully
focused on Education and learning. 2013 End of Year Notes could also
remind educators and policymakers of the importance of our always trying to
empathize and be sensitive to each other’s thoughts and feelings. Most importantly, though, they must always
keep in mind that Education and learning is not only what transpires everyday between a student and
teacher. It takes a village!
For the record, trading places
between some educators and students has been done before in other schools,
though probably not in Belize . However, the results of trading places for a
day in schools throughout Belize
would be rather interesting, I am sure.
It should, though, be done for one main purpose only that has nothing
whatsoever to do with politics: to encourage policymakers and educators to want to understand and fulfill the needs
of students today. In this new age,
feeling empathy for students is but the first step in a long and difficult
journey that our Belizean educators and policymakers must stop putting off and
putting off! That “lee sea breeze” of
teachers’ industrial actions and discontent will not just gradually blow
away. Actually, by continuously ignoring
our young people’s needs, year after year, election after election, we have
created our own enemy – one that has become far more dangerous and destructive
to our people than any hurricane that has ever reached Belizean shores.
So, what happens after we
attempt to walk in students’ and teachers’ shoes for a day? A benefit might be that students who switch
places for a day with educators would get a true perspective on just how
difficult and challenging a teaching career really is. In turn, teachers might get a much better
understanding on just how difficult it can be nowadays for students to stay
focused in the classroom. What might
school policymakers and powerful politicians learn as they try to walk in
teachers’ shoes for a day? (Note:
Teachers from 25 years ago do not automatically know what a teacher today must
deal with in the classroom.) Most
importantly, politicians and policymakers would see that teaching is not just a
job but a vocation! Teachers are paid to
work in schools during a school year; nonetheless, most teachers never stop
working, even after they leave school after a full day of teaching. Inside and outside of school, they keep
striving to find better ways to involve and motivate their students – help them
to learn. Many teachers spend their own
hard-earned money from meager salaries to buy class materials to enhance their
classrooms. Moreover, if students keep
failing (are not learning) teachers will struggle, inside and outside of
school, to find out why, so that they might try to “fix the problem”. How many teachers in Belize are provided with continuing education on how to effectively teach?
I know from lifelong experience that
teachers work late into the night correcting students’ papers and preparing
detailed lesson plans to help students learn. I wonder if highly-paid school
policymakers, i.e. Ministry of Education, work day and night to prepare and/or improve Education Systems that enhance classroom learning. Do/would they spend their own money to meet teachers' and students’ ever-changing and mounting needs in Belize today? Just how much responsibility must we each
assume/take on to ensure that our young people learn today so they may lead us
tomorrow when we need them?
Now, in this growing conflict
of “ignoring students’ needs” where do parents fit? What blame, if any, do they share? Are they also a part of the enemy confronting
students today? Too many times parents
are quick to accuse and/or blame teachers and schools for students’ failures. It’s much easier for a busy parent to point
fingers of blame at teachers, whenever the son or daughter is having
difficulties (academics and/or behavior) at school, than it is for the parent
to make every effort to find the cause(s) of the child’s problems at
school. As an experienced guidance
counselor and teacher, as well as parent, I feel strongly that too many parents
in Belize
(and throughout the world today) have no idea what growing problems are
preventing students from learning everyday.
Education is successful and
productive only when all sides, not just student and teacher, participate in
the process of learning. All sides
include Education policymakers, parents, and an entire community; and each side
needs to participate and contribute its share to the learning process. Productive schools are not those that merely
graduate thousands of students who can pass multiple local and foreign
examinations. Productive schools
successfully motivate students to always want to keep learning, so they can be
productive for themselves, for their country, and for the world. This is a basic fact of why and how we learn
that too many people, rich and poor, refuse to accept. Unfortunately, too many Belizeans prefer to accept a simpler definition of Education: being
able to pass many examinations.
Who, then, would be willing to
try the above-suggested classroom switch scenario? I am sure that the one day switch would result in
chaos. However, with or without such a
switch, school policymakers, parents, and entire communities throughout Belize must
stop assuming they know what goes on in schools, or what “should” go on in
schools. That assumption is but mistake
No. 1 in a long line of misconceptions that contribute to an unproductive
Education System in Belize that does not serve the nation (jewel) as it should!
Author’s Note:
These articles are not intended
to be comprehensive or complete. They
are written and contributed in an effort to provide a “starting point” for
valuable discussion amongst educators, students, and the community. If we discuss and review students’ learning
capabilities and the ways in which we currently try to educate them, then we
can learn from our mistakes as well as success.
Way to go, fellow educators!
Too many time I think we focus on the wrong things and we misjudge the enemy. We become friends with the enemy and as such become part of the problem without even knowing it. I hope that people wake up soon ans learn to see who the real enemy is.
ReplyDeleteWill post a more detailed comment as I sit and let this point set in real good.