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Teaching Profession Q&A

Nation鈥檚 Top Teachers Discuss the Post-Pandemic Future of the Profession

By Sarah Schwartz 鈥 February 25, 2021 11 min read
National Teacher of the Year Finalists (clockwise from top left): Alejandro Diasgranados, Juliana Urtubey, John Arthur, Maureen Stover
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The past school year has challenged teachers like never before.

They鈥檝e had to create online classrooms and adapt to new ways of teaching in person, find ways to build relationships across distance, and support their students through social upheaval and natural disasters, all while weathering the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic themselves.

鈥淚 think that in the short term, the impact on the profession is going to be pretty devastating,鈥 said John Arthur, a 6th grade teacher in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a finalist for the National Teacher of the Year award.

The four finalists spoke with 澳门跑狗论坛 in a virtual round-table discussion on Thursday, hosted by the Council of Chief State School Officers, which administers the program.

Along with Arthur, the finalists are: Alejandro Diasgranados, a 4th and 5th grade teacher in Washington, D.C.; Maureen Stover, a 9th and 10th grade science teacher in Fayetteville, N.C.; and Juliana Urtubey, an elementary special education teacher in Las Vegas. The national winner is usually announced in the spring.

Despite the difficulties this year brought, the teachers said they were hopeful: for kids returning to physical classrooms, for potential policy initiatives in a new White House administration, for a future in which鈥攎aybe鈥攖he events of the past year spur a greater societal investment in schools.

鈥淎nother key element to acknowledge is the gratitude,鈥 said Urtubey. 鈥淚 as an educator feel an immense amount of gratitude for the families who are just going above and beyond to make sure their kids are learning.鈥

澳门跑狗论坛 spoke with the teachers about how they鈥檇 like schools to respond to the unprecedented challenges they face now, what they want to see from President Joe Biden鈥檚 administration and his education secretary nominee, Miguel Cardona, and what the profession will look like in the pandemic鈥檚 wake.

This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

This past school year has brought constant crisis and social upheaval, from the pandemic to this past summer鈥檚 protest for racial justice, to multiple natural disasters. Amid all of this, what do you think that students need right now from their schools?

Arthur: Our kids, our families, our school communities need reassurance as much as they need education or instruction right now. Of course, as teachers, our first obligation is to provide our students with the best educational opportunities possible. But given the fact that we鈥檙e trying to educate them in the middle of a disaster, they need to know that if they鈥檙e learning at home 鈥 they鈥檙e going to get the kind of education they need to be successful later in life. If they are coming into our school buildings, we need to reassure [parents], let them know that their kids are safe, and that we鈥檙e not taking for granted their health as we try to make in-person learning happen.

Stover: I think that this is a real opportunity for us to shift our focus to the social-emotional learning needs of our students. We know that our kids get so much more from school than just academic education. And as teachers, we fill a lot of roles for our students, besides just being the imparter of knowledge.

Diasgranados: We will need to really dig deep and make sure that we are providing students with social and emotional assistance and support when they return, in giving them that space to talk about these things, and the opportunity to connect with teachers and connect with the community again. Because in our community, we were such a tight-knit community. And our school building, Aiton Elementary, is such a beacon of hope in our community. Us not being in that building, we miss out on so many great opportunities.

There鈥檚 been a push recently from the White House, from state governors, from some parents to reopen school buildings as quickly as possible. What do you think about these efforts?

Stover: I think as educators, we鈥檇 all agree that the best place for our kids to be is in classrooms, but we need to make sure that we do that safely鈥攕afely for our students, safely for our faculty and staff, and safely for the families. And so I really applaud the state governments that are coming up with really robust plans that are addressing those [concerns]. I know, in North Carolina, our governor has left that up to each individual county, because we all have unique things going on in our counties, we have different numbers, we have different populations, we have different size communities. By empowering each local education agency to make a determination that鈥檚 best for their local kids and for their local families, we鈥檝e been able to bring our kids safely back into our schools.

Arthur: Safety, obviously, is the first priority. I love that our government, our new administration, is aspirational about the idea of getting kids back into the buildings. I鈥檒l tell you as a teacher, there鈥檚 no place I would rather be than in my classroom with kids all around me. 鈥 I have returned to my school building. I get the pleasure of spending all day with my kids. And I know that we can do it safely. I just would always want to make sure that we鈥檙e not letting the goal drive the decision-making that we always make sound choices based on the information that we have.

Urtubey: First of all, we never closed. I think teachers have worked double time. I know I have since that weekend in March when Nevada had to physically close our schools. We鈥檝e realized that classrooms exist wherever the learning and the community of a classroom is.

I think that there鈥檚 a way to move forward, being considerate of everybody鈥檚 needs, because there鈥檚 no two communities that are alike, no two families alike. ... Across the country, just like in Las Vegas, brown and Black communities have been hit much harder with much harder rates of COVID, and unfortunately, COVID deaths. And so we need to come to terms with the fact that we have to individualize resources, and really prioritize our equity based on how we see this holistic impact of COVID.

What do you hope to see from the Biden administration on education, and what you hope to see from Biden鈥檚 nominee for education secretary, Miguel Cardona?

Urtubey: As a bilingual special education teacher, I am thrilled with the possibility of having more accessible bilingual education. 鈥 In terms of the Biden administration, I鈥檓 really grateful to lean into this idea that teachers are leaders from their classroom. Cohesively, at our schools we can advocate for these changes. And now there鈥檚 more of a space for us to collaborate with policy because policy really needs to be informed by what teachers see every single day. ... We need to [make sure that] teachers have a safe teaching environment so that our students can be safe. Also making sure that our schools are fully staffed. I know a lot of schools are having to look at very difficult budget decisions.

Arthur: One of the main areas that I鈥檝e been concerned about is making sure that our teaching profession reaches the same level of diversity that our student population has. And the only way to do that is to make sure that there are initiatives, grow-your-own teacher programs coming from both the state but also the federal level, to encourage teachers from various communities鈥攏ot just teachers of color, teachers with disabilities, LGBTQ鈥攚e need representation from immigrants, refugees. ... [Cardona] will prioritize, hopefully, making sure that the teachers and those of us who have gone through the process of trying to get public service loan forgiveness, ... that they will get help from the Department of Education, rather than a wall or rejection letter when it comes time to try to collect on the promise that was made to us.

Diasgranados: Before I was teaching in Washington, D.C., I also substituted in the Connecticut area. And I remember that Cardona was bringing a number of different initiatives to make the teaching force a lot more representative of the community there in Connecticut, and I鈥檓 excited that he鈥檒l be able to bring that to a national platform. 鈥 That鈥檚 so important for our students to see, and our next generation of leaders to see them, their faces being represented in the front of the classroom, especially as they enter a more globally and racially diverse world.

Stover: One of the things that I would be really excited to see the White House support and bring back is the Troops to Teachers program, which is currently slated to sunset at the end of this grant year. That is a really fantastic way to help active duty members transition from their military service into service in the classroom. And we鈥檝e seen some really fantastic teachers come through that program. They offer a lot of life experience; they also, a lot of times, can help us with teacher shortages and shortfalls that we see in our classrooms. And they are also a really great way to help bring a more diverse teacher population into our public schools. 鈥

Another thing that I would really love to see the federal government help us with is the resources for us to be able to have trauma-informed instruction, and to have more school psychologists and more school counselors in our public schools. 鈥

I would love to see the administration take a stand on the way we use the data from the federally mandated tests. Right now, that data many times is used as a gotcha. And teachers feel like they are being told that they鈥檙e not doing things correctly, or students feel like they are not successful if the data doesn鈥檛 show that they did well on a test. I would really love to see a shift in that data, where we begin to use that to help us inform instruction. And I think this will be critically important as we do bring our students back to face-to-face instruction.

What are your thoughts on the U.S. Department of Education鈥檚 decision to go forward with state testing this year, while allowing for some flexibility in how those data are used?

Stover: I do think that the testing is important at a macro level, because I think it gives us a really good idea of how much our students learned over the past several months, and it also gives us an idea of how effective our instruction was in blended and remote learning environments. I do not think, though, that we should use that data in a micro sense to determine an individual student鈥檚 abilities, an individual student鈥檚 progress, or an individual teacher鈥檚 progress.

Arthur: I do understand the benefits that you could get from running these end-of-year tests. But I personally feel like the juice just isn鈥檛 worth the squeeze. Right now, our kids have been through a ton of trauma, and they鈥檝e suffered from learning loss. And the last thing you want to do at a time where someone is desperately in need of something is to reduce the amount of that thing that they鈥檙e going to get. So our kids need more time learning, and end-of-year assessments take a ton of time. They鈥檙e logistically complicated to implement. We don鈥檛 have any data from last year to compare to, so the usefulness of that data has already diminished. And more than anything else, our kids need time getting instruction from their teachers.

Urtubey: I agree that I wonder if [testing is] the best use of our students鈥 time and energy. 鈥 I think it鈥檚 also really important to know that students that are at schools that are classified as Title I schools are highly over-tested, meaning the end-of-the-year tests are not the only tests we鈥檙e taking. We鈥檙e sometimes taking monthly tests, or sometimes quarterly tests. And to have done that all-hybrid or all-virtually has put a big tax on our students.

What do you think will be the effect of the pandemic on the teaching profession?

Arthur: I think that in the short term, the impact on the profession is going to be pretty devastating. We鈥檙e already in the midst of what many experts agree is the worst teacher shortage in history. Yet on top of that, the way that teachers were depicted this year? It was great last spring, when we were the heroes, that was a beautiful time. But we continued our hero鈥檚 journey, and it felt like a lot of the public turned on us when we resisted reopening, for example, here in Salt Lake City, and people wanted to be able to send their kids back to school. I think that those narratives are going to cost us people who would have chosen to become teachers. I think in the next few years, it鈥檚 gonna be hard to recruit.

That鈥檚 not to say that I鈥檓 not hopeful, and I鈥檓 not positive in my thinking about where we鈥檙e going forward, because I feel like the teachers coming out of this, the students coming out of it, the families, everyone is both more empathetic, because they鈥檝e lived through experiences that they otherwise would not have had to. And we鈥檙e more resilient, we are stronger, badder teachers than we were before. And we鈥檙e going to use that to make up for any learning loss, we鈥檙e going to use it to elevate our profession.

Urtubey: These issues were here before COVID, and it鈥檚 going to take a collective action to be able to ameliorate some of the tensions. ... We need to be creative about how we recruit and retain teachers, particularly teachers of color. And there鈥檚 lots of ways to do it, like teacher incentives. [When I talk] to college students, kids of color, they鈥檒l tell you that the reason that they can鈥檛 go into education鈥攏ot that they don鈥檛 want to, that they can鈥檛鈥攊s because they can鈥檛 take an unpaid internship, they have to be able to balance family responsibilities. So there鈥檚 creative ways, and as I said, let鈥檚 put our money where our values are.

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