The Buck that Burns Across My Back

It is 14:52 on the eve of ESL summer school. We have spent an entire day, AN ENTIRE DAY, planning for a sixty-five-minute lesson from curriculum that we first laid our eyes on this morning after a completely different and unrelated ENTIRE DAY presentation of curriculum yesterday. And at this moment, he announces that tomorrow, for the first day, the schedule will be “different.” That all our lesson planning has just been flushed down the toilet that has become our society.

I cried on my two-mile walk this morning. Not because it was too hot, or the views of the Perfect Denver Neighborhood weren’t impeccable. Or because I had to teach summer school for four weeks to pay for summer camp for my girls for ONE. But because of an article I read about the University of Phoenix, of all things. About how, in five years, their enrollment has decreased by fifty percent. And starting July 1st, a new law will require that they prove that their graduates make enough money to pay back the loans that their for-profit greed has forced them to take.

I was thinking these things as I made my way across town to the locale of this year’s grant-funded summer school, the University of Denver, a NONprofit institution with gorgeous grounds and transgender bathrooms and air conditioning and classes that start at $1200 a CREDIT.

And how screwed I am. Not because I think that the University of Phoenix is so damn amazing that it could grind up the 100-year-old trees of Denver’s “Ivy League of the West.” But because I have to do this. I have to do this damn summer school and have a part time job as an adjunct-but-never-real professor, that I have to bend my will to the beck and call of disorganized, incapable-of-communicating administrators, all for the buck that burns across my back.

That the measly $600 that I sometimes earn in a month at the University of Phoenix is sometimes all that keeps us from bowing down to debt.

And when he comes in at 13:33 and tells me that they haven’t been able to contact more than 11 students for our summer school, I ask him if it will be cancelled, if I will be shit out of luck on all counts this Tuesday. “No worries… it’s already accounted for… a grant. No pasa nada.” And his blue eyes and Argentinian accent are slappable. “And who paid for it?” I demand, the third time in two months I’ve asked, a question he’s dodged until this moment. “Well… you have. The taxpayers. The READ Act.”

And it all circles back to me. The University of Denver grounds I stand on that have been manicured by professional gardeners. The school I could never afford to attend, nor will any of my children even think of applying to. The public education that is filled and funded with so many holes, twenty-seven gorgeous textbooks, full-color photos and activities galore, a slew of classroom supplies including an electric pencil sharpener, that 11 students will take advantage of … all the rest? To waste.

The “for-profit” evil University of Phoenix that has allowed my family to break free of the paycheck-to-paycheck cycle that is a teacher’s salary, that allowed us to live on a pittance in Spain, that has allowed me to… breathe.

What is an education worth? Why won’t parents commit to a forty-five minute bus ride for free materials, expert teachers, individualized classes, and free breakfast and lunch? Why won’t the University of Denver be asked to publish data on how many students graduate with a super-fancy psychology degree and start their salaries at $22,000? Why won’t our government ever just see that EDUCATION SHOULD BE FREE??

This is my Tuesday. Let the games begin. The Hunger Games, real world style.

Off the List!!

humility lost
 entitled generation
 device-dependent
 
 scream at teacher’s gift??
 made-from-scratch brownies
 that they don’t deserve
 
 how dare they demand
 a prize for unfinished work–
 have i taught them this?
 
 have they learned from me
 that talking back, goofing off
 are the new class norms?
 
 my busted attempt
 at inspiration, this May
 bring on summer, PLEASE!!!
 
 
 
 

Branches

long lost love story
 to their eyes, ears, phones win all
 can’t they see beauty?
 
 dirty jokes revealed
 modern film adaptation
 i still can’t win them
 
 sometimes the weight wins
 bearing down on my heartstrings
 i question my choice
 
 they go home, forget
 (just another stupid class)
 for me, a heartache
 
 i search in branches
 for tomorrow’s brighter sky
 let the clouds break free
 

The Dark Side of Testing

Dear Mr. John Fallon, CEO of Pearson:

“If you’re going to send me out, you better fucking send him too! What the fuck is this, he threw shit at me!”

This is not a post about testing.

It is about what you don’t see, as a corporation who thinks it would be amusing to test children for eleven hours out of their instructional year (on top of classroom tests, reading tests, English language proficiency tests, and district tests). It is about the other side of testing, the weight that bears down on us (teachers, students, parents, administrators) as we face each day with another disruption.

Not only did the students miss an entire week of instruction in March, but they also must have their schedules disrupted for a solid two weeks in May, in addition to the already-in-place finals schedule?

As Mark Twain said, “Teaching is like trying to hold thirty-five corks under water at once.” Try holding them under water after two months of testing, two weeks of a different schedule, and one hour and forty-five minute classes. I don’t know about you, but the last time I wanted to spend a solid 105 minutes on a task, it was a date with my damn pillow. Try entertaining/testing/questioning/reading with/TEACHING a bunch of fourteen-year-olds for that amount of time. It’s a recipe for disaster.

Hence the outburst at the beginning of this post, at the end of day three of this schedule, when we’d all about had enough. It didn’t matter that I picked a book just for kids like him, about a refugee from South Sudan. It didn’t matter that we were about to watch a documentary about the real struggle of Lost Boys. It didn’t matter that I care about everything that we read, speak, and think in my creaky-floored, ever-hot urban classroom. All that mattered was that he–and I–and all of us had reached our limit.

With my other classes, we went to the library to check out books. Upon arrival, we witnessed the mass of students who opted out of the PARCC and were sitting listening to music, streaming videos, and losing another three and a half hours of instruction this week because their parents had the gall to stand up to this nonsense, but not the ability to come and retrieve them from the school.

This is what you don’t see, Mr. CEO with expertise in the “financial sector.” This is not about money. This is not about students’ abilities to meet a standard set forth by a corporation. This is not about a test.

It is about human lives, human quality of life, that with your impossible expectations and complete lack of experience in AN ACTUAL SCHOOL, you couldn’t possibly understand. Make the test digital! Have you ever thought for one moment that my school district, along with thousands of others, doesn’t have a computer for every student like your $8.6-billion-dollar-profit-in-one-year company can provide for its employees? And because of that, testing has to be spread out over days, weeks? Have you ever thought that the questions you ask students, that have been formulated by a team of specialists wanting to sell curricula to failing schools across the country, can’t even be answered by well-educated adults? Have you ever been a School Assessment Leader, a now-full-time position in every school in the nation, trying to balance the lives and supervision of pre-ACT, ACT, PARCC, ACCESS, Interims, SRI, and AP tests in the 180-day school year? (On that note, have you thought about when we would actually have time to do our jobs–TEACH?)

This is not a post about testing.

It is about the dark side of testing. The students who shout out that, “If this test doesn’t count for our grade, and doesn’t determine the classes we can take next year, and doesn’t count towards graduation, then why do we have to take it?” It is about the dark shadow that falls upon schools that are filled with impoverished children, abused children, children whose first language isn’t English, refugees, immigrants, affluent children, apathetic children and children who care more than anything about their education, and the teachers who commit most of their lives to their love for these children, and your. TEST. IS. MAKING. THEM. HATE. US.

Have you thought for a minute, a singular minute, to set foot inside a school? To see for yourself what the students see? To sit for one hour and forty-five minutes in ninth grade English, have a measly five-minute break, then go through the bug-ridden process of trying to log on and then take a math test in geometry that includes trigonometry questions that they won’t study until eleventh grade? Have you visited the students in the library who have lost half a week with the teacher who they wrote cards of gratitude for during teacher appreciation week?

Have you thought for ONE MINUTE about the human effects of your test?

This is not a post about testing. It is a post about you. About your company. About our society. About the people who chose this career not for a profit but for the love of children. They are not profit centers. They are not machines who can be reprogrammed to obediently accept all we dish out.

They are our future.

Please, Mr. Fallon. Let us be sure that we will still have a future to look forward to. Visit a school. Talk to a child. Be something other than a test.

Because this is not a post about testing.

Webbed

come down to Jesus
 teary search for what matters
 (it can’t be plugged in)
 
 but will she listen
 or resent me forever?
 words lost in life’s web
 
 
 

Cycling through the City

teary-eyed ending
 to fifteen-mile bike ride
 oh, but donut grin
 
 we stopped at projects
 perfect playground, tire swings
 Africans playing
 
 (my dream neighborhood:
 kids play outside, not with screens
 poverty beats us???)
 
 my middle child
 pedaling through our city
 here: my home, my heart
 
 

Testing, Testing…

four hours of tests
 in this windowless hell fest
 Spanish comes to mind
 
 lunch union meeting
 complaints about white privilege
 first world problems
 
 (i want to tell them
 comparison is joy’s thief
 but they won’t listen)
 
 afternoon calls home
 to parents of failing kids
 Spanish practice dos
 
 then video view
 lesson to evaluate
 slim chance at progress
 
 audio walk home
 on a windswept cloudy March
 words too fast to grasp
 
 (Alice wonders why–
 in Carroll’s Spanish version
 –so many choices)
 
 then daughters’ chess meet
 and oldest’s plea for pi day
 (dough pulled from freezer)
 
 kitchen now stolen
 by eggs, bowls and pastry cream
 we drive to Wahoo’s
 
 kids eat free tonight
 run wild while hipsters drink

 (we rush home to bake)



 
 tripod ends my night
 (yoga the only answer
 to this chaos)
 
 and now i’m writing
 resolution of ideas
 not broken by tests

Party On

morning to myself
 planning till the end of school
 party on, teachers!
 
 PARCC is not so bad
 but we are American
 we’re born to argue
 
 with kids opting out
 to send snap chats of parties
 who will get punished?
 
 party on, teachers!
 (i still fight for them, my loves
 what else can i do?)
 
 though schools bear the weight
 of society’s choices
 future pays the price
 
 if i’d made the test
 they would trust me and take it
 knowing it’s real
 
 but we aren’t trusted
 we’re blamed, we bear the burden
 the party’s on us

Standardization

three essays a day
 jailed behind windowless walls
 our kids, our future
 
 
 

Pass Codes to Nowhere

ninety minutes lost

a test to test the test: fail

computer burnout

what are we testing?

inadequate servers, schools?

pass codes to nowhere?

the students see it:

the farce of education 

on the error screen