10 Jobs in One!
Scientist, coach, computer whiz...teaching is many professions rolled into one. We asked Instructor readers what it really takes to be “highly qualified.”
How do you define good teaching? What makes a teacher “highly-qualified?” For many of us, the answer is “we know it when we see it.” We know how we feel about our own teaching, or that of a teacher-friend down the hall, but we find it hard to set a list of criteria. Like good parenting, good teaching is hard to quantify. It depends on your educational philosophy, on your background, and your experience. It depends on where you teach and who you teach, and on the resources available to you. In short, it depends on a whole lot. The question, however, has never been more pressing. This school year is the NCLB deadline for ensuring that all teachers in U.S. public schools are “highly qualified.” (For more on NCLB, see page 47.) With the deadline fast approaching, Instructor set out to ask teachers how they define great teaching. It's a complicated question-and a personal one for any teacher, whether you're a newbie or a veteran. And your answers were so multifaceted, it was clear that teaching comprises much more than one job.
“I think a teacher can look really good on paper for NCLB, but not have what it takes to be a great teacher,” says Liza Mathews, a kindergarten teacher for 12 years in Corte Madera, California. “Some of the qualities are intangible— heart, passion, and a conscientious attitude. They can’t be measured.”
“So many people have a simplistic view of teaching—that teaching is telling and learning is listening,” says Barnett Berry, president and founder of the Center for Teaching Quality in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. He adds that NCLB focuses on what teachers know, while overlooking the importance of teaching methods. “Teachers should be assessed not only with paper-and-pencil tests, but also through classroom visits.” Credentials don’t get at the heart of teaching, agrees middle-school teacher Patricia Dancho of Spring Church, Pennsylvania. You first have to love school. “I’ve got chalk dust in my veins,” says the language-arts teacher of 34 years. “If you don’t feel that way, don’t teach. You aren’t doing your kids or yourself any justice.”
Principal Susan Masterson of Janesville, Wisconsin also sees passion for teaching and children as essential. Currently the president of the National Association of Elementary School Principals, Masterson says that when she’s hiring new teachers, she always asks, “What’s the best thing that you’ve done for a child that you’d like to do again?” She explains, “It’s about having empathy, connecting to parts of the students’ lives...that’s what our strongest teachers do.”
Teaching goes beyond multi-tasking, teachers said; it’s all-consuming, calling upon every part of you. “By Friday night, I’m drained,” said West Virginia middle-school teacher Barbara Starliper. “By midday Sunday, I’m gearing up again. There’s so much going on. Still, I can’t imagine doing anything else.” Starliper and the other teachers we interviewed agreed—teaching comprises at least the following 10 jobs (now if only it came with all those salaries)!
This takes time and knowledge. “Teachers need to know how to meet kids where they are,” says Berry. “Effective teachers use many tools to assess how students learn as well as what they know.”
Teaching is much more demanding than it was 20 years ago, and the expectation for student learning is higher, says Linda Darling-Hammond, professor of education at Stanford University and co-editor of A Good Teacher in Every Classroom: Preparing the Highly Qualified Teachers Our Children Deserve (2005), sponsored by the National Academy of Education.
Recent changes in the economy mean that all children need to master critical thinking to be prepared for a more complex workplace. At the same time, schools are more diverse with students in special education, those whose second language is English, and others with needs unmet by their families. This means that teachers have a tougher job and their skills have to be that much stronger, adds Darling-Hammond.
For example, various strategies are used to accommodate different learning styles. “In a great classroom, there will be small-group discussions, large-group activities, and writing in journals to give the teacher insight into what students are thinking and feeling. The teacher will be taking notes on what each kid thinks and says to find out what works, and will then build on those strengths,” says Darling-Hammond.
Teachers who exemplify this quality are those who go beyond sending notes and e-mails home, says Principal Masterson. “Our great teachers do things like go on a Saturday morning to children’s soccer games or organize a classroom potluck,” she says. Others have lunch with their students. They work to connect with kids, motivate them, and help them understand their own learning processes on a deeper level.
Schools are now more client-oriented, adds Katherine James, a recently retired Washington, D.C., principal. Teachers must be diplomats and listen to parents. “Teachers can’t say, ‘My word is the law.’ They may have to negotiate,” says James. Effective teachers sandwich negative feedback with positive comments and learn to handle all kinds of parents from the involved to the disenfranchised.
With the increase in standardized testing in schools, you need to understand how to analyze test scores and see where students make mistakes. Then, you can differentiate the curriculum and cluster students who need intensive work in certain areas.
Researchers are revealing more and more about how people learn; keeping up with those advances is vital to connecting with students. Knowing how different people learn in different ways is like “having the key to open a castle,” says Darling-Hammond. “If teachers don’t have the key, they are just beating their heads against the wall.” When teachers don’t understand learning theories it is like a doctor not understanding anatomy, she adds. It’s becoming more and more critical.
After an endless stream of requests for a pencil loan from her sixth graders, one day Dancho decided to dress up as a “pencil tree,” taping pencils all over her clothes. It was all the students talked about for days. “You have to be a little bit crazy yourself,” she says. “You have to go with the flow.”
Although it can be overwhelming at times, great teachers have a stack of teacher books by their beds and are constantly working to improve their skills.
Learning needs to be targeted and meaningful to keep up with the changing culture and student population. This means finding professional development opportunities to expand your knowledge of various subjects, technology, special accommodations, and ESL. It also means networking with and observing other teachers to learn new strategies.
“There was a time when a teacher would go into a classroom and could close the door, only communicating with the children and the principal,” says Nancy Moga, an elementary-school principal in Covington, Virginia. “Now you have to be a team player—to be able to cooperate with other teachers at your grade level, with the special-ed teacher, guidance counselor, and other staff members,” says the 20-year veteran.
Behind every successful athlete is usually a motivating coach. So what do teachers say makes a great principal? “Someone who is honest, caring, supportive, and fair,” says Pam Boh, a first-grade teacher for 20 years in Columbus, Ohio. “A principal can make or break a cohesive staff. The atmosphere is based on how the principal guides the staff.” Adds Mathews, “A great principal really has to lead with integrity—that is critical. If trust and respect aren’t there, there won’t be a strong and healthy professional relationship.”
Teachers, such as Domangue, use PowerPoint presentations, DVDs, educational computer games, and interactive lessons to get kids engaged. “We can’t think of ourselves: what would interest me in that. We have to think of what would excite a child,” she says.
At Alan Michelson’s elementary school in Blue Spring, Missouri, teachers gradually are getting SMART Boards—interactive white boards—in their classrooms. “It makes students become part of the learning, rather than sitting there,” says the principal of 17 years.
When Karen Heath, a Vermont Teacher of the Year for 2005 sees red faces coming in from recess, she knows to delay the lesson for 10 minutes and allow some silent reading while the students settle down.
In a more serious situation, when a tragedy struck her school this spring and three students died in a drowning accident, she knew that things couldn’t go on as usual in her classroom. For those able to concentrate, Heath provided work. She created space for others to grieve or express their grief through writing. “I had to allow for the emotional needs of the students,” she says.
Not all kids come to school with a hug from a parent or a full tummy. Before they can learn, students must first feel they are in a good and safe place. “Some of my kids are starved for you to just listen to them—to make them matter in your life for a few minutes,” says Barbara Starliper. She tries to understand her students’ perspectives as they try to learn new vocabulary words every week. “If I had to learn 50 new terms in a week, I’d be overwhelmed. You have to have a genuine concern for them.”
Great teachers will learn something personal about each of the students from day one, such as the name of their pet. They will keep up on popular culture by seeing recent kids’ movies, listening to pop music, and reading children’s books. Once a connection is made and a rapport is established, children often behave because they don’t want to disappoint the teacher.
Authentic teachers will share their personal hobbies or bring their own children to school events to show their students another dimension of their lives. Teachers can be authority figures and supportive at the same time, says Principal James. “It’s like being a second parent. I always tell my kids, ‘I am your daytime mom.’” and the list goes on...
When you think of the many hats you wear at school, what would you add? Perhaps bulletin board designer, professional organizer, snack chef, maid, musician, family counselor, special-events coordinator, fundraiser, or cheerleader tops your list.
Oklahoma’s Illgen says that the way highly qualified teachers are defined is evolving, and it is good for the profession to be pushed to improve. “Teachers I meet desperately want to do their best. They are always seeking,” says the 36-year-old elementary-school teacher. “As long as we desire to do our best, we will move forward.”
Caralee Adams writes about education, parenting, and health. she lives in bethesda, md. you can write to her and the editors at instructor@scholastic.com.







