We need more teachers, not ‘keepers’
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Monty Snyder
This is a topic I felt strongly about when I started my short-lived
teaching career. My first teaching job after college was quite
wonderful and richly rewarding, if not financially. It was of a
personal nature.
Myself and several other fresh-out-of-college teachers had the
temerity to go to the superintendent of the district and propose a
merit system.
Well, we knew teachers were kind of disappointed at the lack of
enthusiasm and involvement the tenured teachers showed.
And we thought there must be some better way to equivocate the
teachers who were keeping school as opposed to the ones who were
teaching school.
Of course, the outpouring of protests by a large number of
teachers in the district pretty soon drowned out our pleas to at
least make an attempt to base pay increases on merit -- to reward the
teachers who were motivated and who inspired and excited our
students.
That was in 1962. And as the saying goes, it seems like deja vu
all over again. Anyway, I went into business, where my efforts were
reflected in my income.
I think merit pay is a wonderful idea, but I don’t think it’ll
ever fly. There’s too many school-keepers. And there are not enough
school teachers.
Merit pay is wonderful. But how and who decides what is
meritorious?
* MONTY SNYDER is a resident of Newport Beach.
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