Today Logan, my Emory partner, came in for his weekly
observation. During a lull, he asked if I’d heard the statistic that only 51%
of students in Atlanta Public Schools graduate from high school. He was shocked
by this statistic- and rightly so. However, this is a statistic that we
teachers hear almost daily, so I wasn’t at all taken aback by it. After he
left, I started thinking about the difference in our reactions. It’s not that I’ve
gotten complacent, but facts like that don’t have the same impact on me that
they used to. The problem is, they should! As I look at my 19 first graders,
there is no way I would want to pick 9-10 students who not only won’t go to
college, but won’t even graduate high school. Unfortunately, that is what the
statistics say will happen.
At this point in the year, teachers are exhausted. We are
inundated with data to remind us of previous years’ failures; we are realizing that
we are behind on our curriculum maps just over a month before state testing;
and our students are at least as burnt out as we are. Long story short, it can
be easy to get caught up in the day to day work and forget about what really
brought us into the classroom in the first place. We don’t teach just so
students can learn the state standards. We teach, because we want to set our
students up for success- not just on their weekly assessments or state tests,
but throughout their academic careers and beyond. We teach, because we want to shape
our students as people and have a positive and lasting impact on their life’s
trajectory. We teach, because a 51% graduation rate is unacceptable.
I am so grateful that there is a fresh pair of eyes in my
classroom, another person who is invested in my students’ education. A 51% high
school graduation rate is absolutely unacceptable and should be infuriating
each time I hear it. With just over 10 weeks left in the school year, it is
more important than ever that I put the conscious effort in every day to ensure
that I am preparing my students for success, not just next year, but throughout
their entire academic careers. My students deserve better than 51%, and I owe
it to them to give that to them.
-Jenny Drucker
Great post, Ms. Drucker! I am grateful to be able to come to your classroom each week and learn from you and your students. Keep up the good fight!
ReplyDeleteI loved this post because it's so interesting to me how easily we can get used to the statistics in our own work (and need an outside person to come in and remind us that those statistics really are crazy)! Teachers -- what are some recent health statistics you've seen that are unbelievable to you?
ReplyDeleteI agree with Ariela- This post made me realize how many health statistics aren't as startling to me as they should be. Specifically, I thought about how as a health educator, I am consistently telling college students that 1 in 2 young people will get an STI by the time they are 25. While I obviously care about preventing STIs, since that is the job I chose and love, this post made me take a step back and realize how absolutely crazy that is. I never distanced myself enough to realize half the students I am talking with will likely be infected with some form of an STI in the next 4-7 years. It served as some added motivation and rejuvenation for sure!
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