Who’s In Charge?

In the struggle for control over the country鈥檚 education system, recent events show that it鈥檚 the teachers who come out on top
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It鈥檚 not an easy time to be teacher right now. Since February, the country has been swept by a wave of walkouts. From West Virginia and Arizona to Oklahoma and Kentucky, many educators are leaving their classrooms in protest of low wages, difficult working conditions, and an apathetic federal government. The strikes have hit the hardest in states where collective bargaining rights have historically been the weakest. While there haven鈥檛 been any reported walkouts in Michigan this year 鈥 teachers鈥 unions have always wielded power here 鈥 the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 June ruling on Janus vs. AFSCME, labeled by some as one of the most consequential rulings of the year, obstructs public sector unions from extracting agency fees from public employees who they negotiate on behalf of but are not union members. It鈥檚 a decision that points to the waning of union authority across the country, and exemplifies U.S. Secretary of Education, Betsy DeVos鈥, political agenda. On the other hand, teachers in Michigan, when adjusted for cost of living, are the highest paid in the country according to the nonprofit, EdBuild. In hopes of better understanding how all these factors are playing out locally, 香港六合彩图库资料 checked in with teachers and administrators across metro Detroit to see how educators felt about the national unrest, Betsy DeVos鈥 agenda, and their own work within the classroom. While emotions are certainly running high, one thing every teacher seems to have realized is that the power to effect change ultimately lies with them.

鈥淲e need funds to make sure that education is equitable across school districts,鈥 says Dr. Sabrina Evans, the principal of Carver STEM Academy in Detroit. Having served as principal for the past nine years, Evans, who holds a doctorate in education administration, draws from a wealth of practical experience. 鈥淎nd Detroit Public Schools need more funds.鈥 She sees federal funding as the best way to mitigate the differences between schools even if it comes at the cost of having the curriculum mandated in certain ways. Though she bemoans the current federal administration鈥檚 indifference to the needs of schools in urban areas like Detroit, she doesn鈥檛 see it as an issue specific to the current moment. 鈥淗onestly, we鈥檝e been dealing with this issue in urban schools well before I graduated but my role as an administrator and as a teacher is to put students first otherwise, we are going to defeat the whole purpose of educating children.鈥

鈥淚n the end, it鈥檚 the work that I do with my students that keeps me grounded and keeps reminding me of why I chose this profession.鈥
鈥擩ayna听Rumble, English teacher

Jayna Rumble, a teacher at Troy High School, admits to feeling a little less settled at times. 鈥淚 have to be honest that it is sort of a tough time to be a teacher in the last couple of years 鈥 it can be easy to fall into a negative headspace about things.鈥 She鈥檚 pointing to the perception that the tension rippling through the national landscape has left many teachers dejected about their mission as educators. Yet the subjects Rumble teaches, ninth-grade English and journalism, help revitalize her sense of purpose. 鈥淭here are so many competing opinions [but] through English and journalism, I feel like I鈥檓 teaching students the value of accurate information and balance and reporting. I鈥檓 actually teaching the value of truth.鈥 Rumble also credits the local school system for its fastidious efforts to ease the weight of national unrest. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e doing a really good job of keeping our spirits high, but that鈥檚 something I do myself, too. There are so many important things in the work I鈥檓 doing with my students that keep me grounded and keep reminding me of why I chose this profession.鈥

Kelsie Autterson, a developmental kindergarten teacher at Clawson鈥檚 Kenwood Elementary School, believes that the trick to staying grounded is recalling her own schooling experience. 鈥淚 was educated in public schools all my life, and though things can get a bit frustrating at times, I remember that people like Betsy DeVos don鈥檛 have the same awareness of the public education system.鈥 DeVos鈥 recent push for school choice, a policy that funnels public education funds towards the school of a student鈥檚, or in most cases a parent鈥檚, choice 颅鈥 be it public, private, charter, or home-school 颅鈥 has contributed to what Autterson describes as 鈥渕iseducation.鈥 She鈥檚 found that many parents have begun to view the policy in a positive light, but her proximity to its effects says otherwise. 鈥淎s a teacher, I see that when parents are given more choices, it negatively impacts students. Sometimes, they are pulling their children out of public school districts, and that means that money, jobs, and resources are essentially leaving that school system.鈥 Autterson has become all the more motivated to share her stance on the topic because it stems from her first-hand exposure to its drawbacks.

In the end, Evans concludes that what is central to a healthy education system is love. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 do anything without love,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 very important to this. Teaching is not just something I want to do, I see it as my purpose and my calling.鈥