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OUR TAKE

Majority opinions of The Red & Black's editorial board

Issue date: 8/29/05 Section: Opinions
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The good news for students working toward a degree in education is that finding a job once they graduate should be a breeze.

The bad news for everyone else is that this is because the nation is suffering from a shortage of school teachers.

Schools without enough teachers must increase class sizes, meaning many students don’t get the one-on-one attention needed to prepare them for the next grade, and they fall further and further behind every year.

As college students, most of whom do not plan to enter the field of education upon graduating, it is easy to lose sight of how this impacts us. But look forward a few years into the future to when children now enrolled in the state’s public schools will be our co-workers, bosses and employees. A key component to healthy local, state and national economies is a well-educated and qualified workforce. If the quality of public school education takes a blow, we all feel the pain.

Educators are overworked, undervalued and shamefully underpaid, pushing a lot of students with a desire to teach away from the profession. Many people graduate, work for a few years at a higher-paying job then return to school to get their certification once they realize they were meant for the classroom.

This will strike a chord with many students at the University caught between the desire to teach and the dream of someday owning a luxury home and driving an expensive car.

These students should weigh the invaluable good they can do as a teacher when mapping out what professional path to take.

But there are also more tangible reasons for becoming a teacher, chief among them being an almost guaranteed job.

Many University students graduate, then spend weeks or months sitting at mom and dad’s house searching for a job while schools are in dire need of new teachers.

Students who earn degrees in areas other than education can sign up for Teach for America or work toward their certification while teaching in high-need areas. Both are ways for professionals to get their foot in the classroom door after finishing their studies in something else.

The marketplace is overflowing with opportunities for noble men and women willing to lead the unsung life of a teacher.

We salute students studying to become teachers and encourage all others to consider joining them in answering this important call.


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anonymous871

anonymous871

posted 8/29/05 @ 10:58 AM EST

For those who do choose to become school teachers, have the guts and courage to speak out when the school board appoints an incompetent principal, or pays the school coach more money than the physics teacher, or fires a physics teacher because he disciplined a student for sleeping in class as happened recently in the County of Gwinnett, City of DaCula. (Continued…)

anonymous871

anonymous871

posted 8/30/05 @ 1:51 AM EST

I'm with you Winfield. All the local paper cares about is the football prospects. As for the teaching school at UGA, why don't they start in their own back yard and mentor the kids in Athens where the drop out rate is over 50%, or is that too much real world for all those sorority girls and frat boys with the Bush stickers on their cars and their stupid yellow ribbons about supporting our troops when what they really mean is support our troops as long as it's the poor, underprivledged kids fighting the war. (Continued…)

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