Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Dancing
So...I didn't watch the first year. But I've been in it nearly every season since. DWTS does a fall and a spring season. Some aren't that great to me, but they pulled out the stops this year. I vote every Monday night to make sure that NOBODY PUTS BABY IN A CORNER! I LOVE watching Jennifer Gray (Team Jennhougher) dance. Except for last week, she has been absolutely amazing. I'm convinced that she was ROBBED last night - her routine deserved perfect TENS! I don't know why she didn't get them! But I'll be watching tonight...and hoping that my 42 votes (6 votes per e-mail address and by text message) pay off!
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Training
This morning, I attended a workshop called Involving the Public in the Budgeting Process. As most of you know, this is a sore spot for me. But - the difference between me and some bitter old man is that I want to learn. I want new tips! I want to find a better way to do things! And after today's session, and some brainstorming at Barnes and Noble, I think we may have a few! Hearing some of today's suggestions was rather validating, because some of the tips they gave were things I was already planning, like having community meetings, doing educational outreach, and doing short YouTube videos. I also liked the idea of a Citizens Budget Advisory Committee. Spread the love! (Or, depending on who's talking...the hate.)
I'm energized. I'm so energized, I updated my website!
Oh...and you can catch a bit of what we're doing here.
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
You asked for it...so here it is...
I am ANGRY. You might wonder, why are you angry? You're usually so positive with your attitude and outlook! Normally, I am. What I'm angry about is the way people seem to feel the need to treat me of late, just because I hold elected office. (It's not you, Annie...) Allow me to explain.
I intentionally ran for this office. I had some idea of what I was getting into. I knew it was going to be a thankless job, and I never got into this by thinking that people would be falling at my feet. I also have no intention of sitting around, bemoaning the work or the job itself, because I asked for it. But right now? I'm about ready to give it back.
I realize that times are tough. I realize that budgets are tight. And I know that the choices that the Board made this year weren't easy or popular. But where was everybody when we were working through the budget? How much more can we do, send a personal letter every time we meet? I can't get five people to show up to a regular meeting where things are being discussed, but give someone an opportunity to complain, and man, they run with it.
For the past three years, I have willingly given my time, my energy, and what little talent I have into this work. Until tonight it was a joy. Until tonight, it was worth it. Time away from my family, time away from my home and my job, having to take vacation time to be at Town Hall. It simply doesn't seem to be worth it right now. I just can't take the sheer volume of hatred, of hatefulness, and of backstabbing from supposed friends and neighbors. I'm tired. I'm sick, and I'm tired. I'm over it.
I know, I know...I just need to step back. I know that it's the 80/20 rule...20% of the people do 80% of the complaining. But would it kill anybody to say, "Hey...it's a thankless job and I see your car at Town Hall at all hours of the night...thank you for spending your free time, your family time, your time away from your dying mother...thank you for spending that time working for this community. It doesn't go unnoticed." I'm not asking for the world...and now, after having said this, such comments would ring rather hollow. I'm venting, and I know it. That'll happen after four straight months of verbal abuse.
I wish for you, those of you reading this, a better night than I've had. I wish for you appreciation for your work, your time, and your life. I wish for you a fantastic day every day. And I hope like hell I wake up and see that bright outlook for my tomorrow. My best to all of you.
Thursday, September 23, 2010
A Letter to Time...
September 20, 2010
Dear Editor:
I read with great interest the articles A Call to Action for Public Schools and How to Recruit Great Teachers. I found many of the author’s points very interesting. However, there were also several points left out that should have been included, and several questions that went unanswered.
Many so-called ‘school choice advocates,’ as well as members of the current Admnistration, quite heavily favor the use of charter schools as an answer to many of the ills facing our country’s public schools. However, charter schools are not always the answer. Charter schools began as an educational ‘experiment’ nearly 20 years ago as a way for traditional public schools to gain new insights and innovations to apply in their own practices. However, nearly two decades later, very few of those innovations have made any form of a transfer to traditional public schools, and as you note in your article in a rather ‘roundabout’ way, many charter schools have become the middle ground between public and private schools and are just a method by which parents can opt out of their local public school.
One major issue that received precious little coverage in A Call to Action for Public Schools is that of the unfunded mandate. The greatest unfunded mandate of the current generation is that of the current Elementary and Secondary Education Act – also known by the misnomer of No Child Left Behind. The entire program of ESEA/NCLB is basically set up backwards. There is, as we are all aware, a heavy emphasis on standardized testing in the current legislation – but where is any notion of student growth? When a student comes into my 3rd grade classroom on a 1st grade reading level, and I teach that student for an entire year, and s/he leaves reading on a 2nd grade level, have I not given that student a full year’s education? Where is the measure of the student’s growth? The answer is simple – no credit is given for such growth, and both the student and the teacher are punished for not being on grade level.
On that same page, there are a (rather well known) series of sanctions built into ESEA/NCLB that quite frankly are constructed backwards. The first sanction is to allow parents to move students to another school – and this sanction is put into place before any supplemental education services (also known as tutoring) are offered at the base school! What sense does this make? Why would you not offer the opportunity to improve at the school where the child has already made social connections and has a support system in place before uprooting him or her? Fixing the broken parts of ESEA/NCLB, and appropriately funding it – or not requiring those components that aren’t funded – is a great first step towards improving public education in the United States.
Throughout the article (and the movie referenced in the article “Waiting for Superman”) much mention is made of the Teach for
In your lengthy discussion surrounding Teach for America and other alternatives to traditional teacher preparation programs, you also omitted several different teacher preparation programs around the country, including one of the most innovative programs which can be found right here in North Carolina. The North Carolina Teaching Fellows Program, now in its 24th year, has long been a leader in preparing educators for classroom experience. NC Teaching Fellows are awarded a scholarship of $6,500 each year for up to four years in college in exchange for teaching in a public school in
Unlike many of my college classmates at the Elon College School of Education, those of us who were NC Teaching Fellows were in schools in the second semester of our freshman year. Getting Teaching Fellows into schools for practical experience actually began the trend of doing such with all education majors that is now pervasive throughout schools of education in
The concept of ‘tenure’ is mentioned several times throughout the article. Whenever referenced, it is done so in a very negative light. There is more to the concept of ‘tenure’ than meets the eye. Allow me to explain. Tenure is not a guarantee that ‘bad teachers’ will stay in the classroom…it is mainly a change in status from probationary to career (which is why it is known as career status in many states, including
While on the topic of professional improvement, I often wonder why it is that we are so quick to throw teachers out into the street just because one evaluator may believe they aren’t meeting the evaluator’s definition of ‘effective’? I’m sure that Mr. Cloud wasn’t a distinguished author when she began her career. Was she supported in her career and nurtured, providing the opportunities for growth necessary to become a top-notch author, or was she simply cast aside with no opportunity for learning to improve her skills? Do we expect that simply because many refer to teaching as a ‘calling’ that every teacher come to work on the first day with every skill set refined to the hilt? Should we in our examination of reform take a look at how we mentor novice teachers, and how we mentor more veteran teachers?
In
As well, in these highly expansive articles discussing how teachers must grow and how teachers must be effective, why is there absolutely no mention of proven, standards-based and research-driven processes for teacher growth and effectiveness such as National Board Certification. Teachers who pursue National Board Certification must not only deeply examine their own professional practices, but they must reflect on those practices and how their actions impact student learning every day. The National Board Certification process involves four portfolio-based entries which are completed over a series of months, and include an examination of student work samples, videotaped teaching lessons, and an in-depth reflection of the teaching practices that are employed by the teacher. Over the course of the last decade, study after study has shown that National Board Certified Teachers do have a measurable impact on student achievement, and the almighty test score which we have clung to as a measure of student intelligence in this country. Why did Ms. Ripley not examine this process while discussing school reform and teacher effectiveness?
Referring back to Mr. Cloud’s article regarding recruiting better teachers, many good points are made. The byline sums it up nicely – pay and prestige are part of the problem – but there’s one major challenge that he didn’t discuss, and many people for some reason consistently fail to do so, and that is the issue of teacher retention. What good does it do to recruit a teacher if they leave after a few months or a couple of years? As I shared earlier, one of the major issues facing many of our most challenged schools is the amount of heavy teacher turnover. Such turnover exists for a number of reasons – a lack of ‘exciting’ living environment, poverty in the community, an unsupportive administration at the school, an uninterested or undeveloped parent population, and the list goes on. When are we, as a country and an educational ‘establishment’ going to take seriously the issue of teacher retention?
As the article notes, pay is one major issue. When I left the classroom, I made roughly $38,000 per year – and that included extra duty pay. That was after having taught for seven years. Why should someone have to work for ten years just to break the $40,000 per year barrier? I realize that to many, $40,000 may seem way too high to pay “just a teacher,” especially “just a teacher who gets three months off in the summer.” But they are wrong.
The justification? First, I don’t know of any teacher who actually gets ‘three months off in the summer.’ Most teachers don’t end the school year until mid-June, and then there’s a series of workdays after that. Thus, the real “summertime” break for traditional schools is actually two months, not three. School in many states may not begin until after Labor Day, but you can rest assured that teachers are back in schools before then, as there’s also a series of workdays prior to students returning. Most teachers also spend time in the summer months pursuing professional development while school is not in session (for traditional calendar schools), thus the notion of a three month vacation is not only a misnomer, it’s a myth.
Second, if one were to calculate the number of hours an average teacher spends working both in and out of the classroom during the regular school year, it would likely be about twelve hours (time teaching, time planning, time meeting, time grading…). Now…take that twelve hours per day, and multiply it by the North Carolina teacher’s school year – 215 days (180 of which are student contact days). You end up with 2,580 hours. Now, divide that into the base salary of a fifth year teacher in
Most assume that this issue is where teachers unions come into play, and why ‘all we ever hear is unions harping about teacher pay and benefits.’ But salary and benefits is not all for which teachers unions stand. In full disclosure, I mentioned earlier that I am an education consultant for the North Carolina Association of Educators (NCAE). NCAE is the state affiliate in
In this country, our legal system is based upon the principle that one is innocent until proven guilty. Why would we run our schools differently? And where is the mention of the good work that unions do? The National Education Association has for decades worked to find solutions to issues such as teacher retention, improving graduation rates, lowering dropout rates, working with students of poverty, and supporting priority schools. Where is the mention (or the discussion) of the work of teachers unions around closing achievement gaps? Where do your authors share thoughts about teaching students of all achievement and socioeconomic levels? Teachers unions are about more than pay and benefits. We are about educating the whole child, and every action we take proves it. As the motto of the North Carolina Teacher Working Conditions Survey says, ‘Teacher working conditions are student learning conditions!’ None of these issues, or these viewpoints, were taken into account in the articles published in Time. I fail to see how this magazine can maintain its reputation as a fair and non-biased publication with such one-sided and slanted articles that leave out information.
Very truly yours,
Elic A. Senter
Franklinton, NC
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
High Speed Rail
Now…here’s what I want everyone to understand. This proposal didn’t show up yesterday. In fact, I’m quite tired of hearing about how high speed rail is some liberal boondoggle brought on by the wasteful, socialist Obama Administration. Saying that just means you’re looking for a way to slam the President without knowing your history. This program was actually begun under a different Democrat…Bill Clinton. It was during Clinton’s second term that our region was identified as a priority high speed rail corridor. It was during Bush’s (W’s) first term that the program was accelerated and that’s actually when money began being poured into the program. So to blame a Democratic administration and a Democratic Congress for spending that was accelerated and initiated during a Republican administration and a Republican Congress is nothing more than showing your interest in partisanship and division.
This program knows no politics. It knows no high quality planning. It knows no limits to spending. And in Franklinton, it knows no limits to adverse impacts to our community. Listening to proponents promote the positives (I’m into alliteration) grates my nerves more than nails on a chalkboard. Do not tell me how wonderful it will be to get on a train and get to Washington, DC in four hours from Raleigh when it only takes me FOUR HOURS to get to Washington from FRANKLINTON! That’s a CROCK! Why would I get on a train to drive to downtown Raleigh only to get on the train and ride to Richmond? If the train’s going to take two hours…and then, I’m taking a total of just under THREE hours to get there…when I can just drive myself in the SAME TWO HOURS! Ugh.
I absolutely WILL NOT allow our community and our citizens to bear the cost of constructing substations on the east side of town just so ‘high speed rail’ can be built to separate the east and west sides of Franklinton! That’s simply unfair. It’s also an unnecessary fiscal burden. And as long as I’m sitting in this chair (or with this pin on my shirt), it ain’t gonna happen. Just like Scarlett O’Hara…’As God as my witness, I’ll lie down and die first!’
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Mama
But first…the bad. As you know, my mom was diagnosed with brain cancer in late May, and in mid-June, had a tumor removed from the left side of her brain. She has rebounded beautifully, and we truly could not ask for more from that surgery. Following her surgery, a PET scan to detect other cancerous areas was ordered by both her surgeon and her oncologist. Then, the badder news. That paragon of virtue and caring, Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina, denied my mother’s PET scan, saying it wasn’t medically necessary. Wasn’t medically necessary? Are you serious? WHERE IS DEREK SHEPHERD WHEN YOU NEED HIM???
Fortunately, there are angels among us. My mom’s oncologist made a couple of phone calls, and Rex Hospital paid for her PET scan. Let there never be questions why I will continue to always choose Rex Hospital for my healthcare needs. The PET scan was on Monday, July 26. We got the results on Thursday, July 29. And it wasn’t pretty.
My mom’s base cancer, the root cause of everything else, is lung cancer, from a small mass in the upper lobe of her right lung. Stage 4 lung cancer. There is no survival rate. No matter what measures are taken, she will eventually die from it. Not only that, but it has also spread to her lymph nodes (just above the right breast), the right side of her throat, possibly her liver, and of course, her brain. However, they needed to do more studies on her liver to determine if it was actually cancer. So, an additional MRI was ordered.
Now, for the good news! The spot on her liver ISN’T CANCER! FINALLY! Something good in all of this! There is some concern over a new spot on her brain, but they’re not sure what that is just yet.
For today…I’ll savor that news.
The Late, Great Sadie Cutchins
Moving from humble beginnings in Warren County, at 17 she married Joseph B. F. Cutchins, Sr. and moved to Franklinton, where he was a well respected businessman. (Of course, as Commissioner Cutchins shared at her funeral services, his uncles – her brothers – always referred to his dad as ‘that bald headed man that stole Sadie.’) Together, they built one of the most venerable establishments in Franklinton history – what is now Cutchins Funeral Home. They also began a journey that would lead them both to becoming two of Franklinton’s most prominent citizens.
Charitable, giving, and most of all, loving, Mrs. Cutchins made great strides in not only bridging divides in our community, but in our region, as well. She was the first African American member of the Franklinton City Schools Board of Education (when we were a separate school system). She reached across our community to foster conversation and understanding, to build the bridges that would help unite Franklinton as one. But most of all, as so strongly evidenced by her homegoing services, she was the matriarch of a family that loved her. For that, and so much more, she will be truly missed.
Godspeed, thy faithful servant.