The
plan was to enjoy my summer, clean out the basement, and go on a few
college visits with my daughter. Yeah, storm clouds are brewing for
ATRs, but I made a solemn vow to stay above it all, not allow it to
claim any real estate in my head, and enjoy my time off. That worked
for a little while, but now the school year is in full swing and the
press in on the hunt for the next “bad teacher” story.
So
the Times, the Post, and Chalkbeat started banging the drum against
ATRs. How we need to “find a job”. How we are “without full
time positions”. That there must be “reasons why (we) are not
hired”. Nicole Thomas even went so far as to voice her fear that
her child may actually be given an ATR for a teacher in her school,
and is “very concerned”. And of course, Kate Taylor at the Times had to join the party with this beauty of a hatchet job,
and the Editorial Board of the NY Post us up in arms that we may
actually be teaching children soon (the horror – teachers TEACHING
children!), so now I’ve got to set the record straight.
I
feel you, Nicole and Kate. I do. I mean, WHY, ladies, would you want
a veteran teacher who has been working with children successfully for
YEARS, and who, you know, passed classes and exams and stuff, in
“high needs” schools? Much better to have a newbie 23 year old
with a sociology degree who wants to help the little brown children
by doing some “good in the “hood” before heading off to
becoming a charter school principal or investor at Goldman Sachs. And
they all look so alike (matching ponytails and sloppy buns,
sundresses, and flip flops) that they are virtually interchangeable!
So much so that the kids won’t even know when one leaves after a
month and is replaced by another one!
I’m
going to let you in on a few ATR secrets, Ladies. Just between us.
Let’s get the easy stuff out of the way first. ATRs do not have
horns and tails. We do not eat young children for lunch (or dinner).
We are not the child molesters you see on TV or on flyers in your
local deli. We do not spend our evenings plotting how to milk the
system and avoid helping children. Sorry to ruin it for you, but we
do what other teachers do. We get up, fight traffic to get to work,
do our jobs, and fight more traffic to come home and take care or our
own families, get the car washed, pay the cable bill, and
occasionally go to dinner and a movie. Yet, you make claims that are
patently ABSURD about us. Given that I have a particular affection
for both theater of the absurd AND the absurdity of life, allow me to
point out the ridiculousness of the claims being made against ATRs.
Let’s
start with the common fallacy that ATRs “lost a job”. That’s
news to me and every other ATR I know. I’ve never been fired,
suspended, disciplined, or laid off. I’ve never been on
unemployment. I get up and I go to work every day. I am a tenured
Reading Specialist with the New York City Department of Education.
That is my job. I get paid from the NYC DOE twice a month because it
is my job. The fact is that the DOE does not ALLOW me to do the job
for which I was hired. My job is to teach children who struggle with
reading, to read. But, when I go to work every day, I am given a sub
schedule, or I cover teacher preps, or I am the second teacher in an
ICT class. So, to say I do not have a job is absurd. I have one. I am
just not permitted to do it. And that is not my problem. It is the
DOE’s.
It
is also said that ATR teachers are “without full time positions”.
Again, this is not true. We go to work daily and teach full
schedules. Five periods a day, every day. That is a FULL TIME
position. I get paid my FULL TIME salary because, Nicole and Kate, I
work FULL TIME. The fact that I am not being given work that
correlates with my job title is, again, not my problem and not under
my control. I cannot give myself classes or groups of students.
Administrators do that.
My
dear ladies, you insinuate that ATRs are guilty of crimes but are
unable to be fired. That is an absurd statement. Any teacher who is
found guilty during a 3020a is NOT sent to the ATR. What happens to
them is called “FIRING”. Any teacher who is an ATR after a 3020a
is there because the 3020a did NOT find CAUSE for termination. You
know, it’s that whole guilty vs. not guilty thing. Like Law and
Order. But with real teachers, not actors. Before the ATR they would
be simply placed back in their classrooms. But the ATR now provides a
very nice dumping ground for teachers a principal wants to be rid of.
It’s brilliant, actually. Make some sh** up about the teacher, and
even if they win the 3020a because the principal lied her behind off,
you STILL have that teacher out of your hair (and off your payroll)
because they will be dumped into the ATR. Never mind that many
principals want to be rid of certain teachers because they have
issues. Issues like, oh, let’s see…. maybe being in a position
that the principal has earmarked for a crony, or maybe the principal
has a bunch of sorority sisters she has promised jobs, or maybe the
teacher is making too much money coupled with too much seniority,
which makes it impossible to just excess the teacher. Maybe this
teacher knows her contractual rights and insists on abiding by them.
Maybe she tells other teachers what their rights are and calls
bullsh** when she see it. Or this teacher may even be planning to run
against the chapter leader you have in your pocket and may actually
win, messing up your ability to ignore the contract. Any of those
reasons are enough to get a principal to trump up bogus charges
against a teacher. You see, my dears, principals can be vindictive,
power drunk dictators who will stop at nothing to create a staff of
syncophants. But you’d never know that from reading Chalkbeat, the
New York Post, or the Times, because, according to these
publications, all principals are above reproach, all the time, and
want nothing more than to run schools where rainbow unicorns run the
halls, and everyone emits rose scented farts.
Now,
I’m sure your StudentsFirstNY friends, you’re The74 buddies, and
your Families for Excellent Schools pals will disagree. Because when
you are taking Gates and Walmart money and cozy up to Betsy DeVos,
things get filtered through the prism of cash. But my dear ladies,
have no fear. If your child is given an ATR teacher this September,
she or he will be in good hands, regardless of who his or her parent
is. We’ve been doing this a long time, and believe it or not, we’ve
got this.
Brilliant! Unfortunately, this is the inconvenient truth that these ladies do not want to hear! Great post.
ReplyDeleteThey know the truth, its a hit piece
ReplyDeleteExcellent article. I loved it.
ReplyDeleteNow if only it's printed in chalk beat times or perhaps the post! Great piece! Very cathartic!
ReplyDeleteAnd that's the thing. We know these are hit pieces. But the UFT won't defend ATRs in the press? Reduce my dues then. If I'm not getting support I shouldn't have to pay as much.
ReplyDeleteThe UFT is full of crooks.
ReplyDeleteIf you are a NYC DOE ATR, please join our group on Facebook...ATR Support Group- https://www.facebook.com/groups/ATRSUPPORT/ and please check your private facebook inbox to answer a series of questions after requesting to join.
ReplyDelete