jdonn, on Oct 16 2008, 04:48 PM, said:
And anyway, won't a terrible teacher who chose to be a teacher probably be terrible at other jobs too?
Perhaps this person will be terrible at many jobs, or perhaps this person will be more suited to another job and be less terrible at it. But, there are jobs that play a less critical role in our society than teaching; I'd rather be inconvenienced by a terrible salesperson than have my child in a classroom with a terrible teacher.
Some unrelated public school items:
Certification is not required in all school districts, at least not in Maine. Some school districts will hire a teacher on a provisional basis, put a plan in place for certification, and count actual teaching in place of the student teaching requirement. Other school districts require certification before employment.
My son is 10 years old and in the 5th grade. The school he attends will be having a mock election soon and they have been discussing some of the issues that might be important. Today's topics seem to have been health care and immigration. He told me that Obama wants everyone to have health insurance, so he's going to raise taxes and give the money to the insurance companies. The immigration discussion apparently involved how best to split the cost of a fence or wall between the US and Mexico between the border states of Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California (said fence being erected because Mexicans are coming to America and taking our jobs). When I asked him how the Mexicans were taking our jobs from Americans, he guessed maybe they were killing people.
Last year he came home from a cub scout meeting and told me that he was glad American troops were in Iraq because if they weren't Iraqi soldiers would be in America. If someone has a good way to explain to a 10 year-old why the US is fighting a war in Iraq, please let me know.
I was in school to pick my son up yesterday and overheard one teacher tell another about some wonderful boughten frosting. For those of you who are not quite sure, boughten frosting is the frosting that you buy already made as opposed to the kind you make from scratch. Teacher A questioned the use of boughten; Teacher B insisted it was a word. Much to my surprise (and dismay) I later found boughten in Merriam-Webster Online.