Friday, January 31, 2014

Weingarten: Stop blaming teachers | News Blog | Rochester City Newspaper

Weingarten: Stop blaming teachers | News Blog | Rochester City Newspaper:



Weingarten: Stop blaming teachers

POSTED BY  ON FRI, JAN 31, 2014 AT 10:50 AM

Rochester’s teachers are not to blame for the city’s current economic problems, said Randi Weingarten this morning during a stop at the Children’s School of Rochester. Weingarten is president of the American Federation of Teachers, which at 1.5 million members, is one of the largest organized labor groups in the country.

click to enlargeRandi Weingarten (left) visited World of Inquiry school #58 to talk with teachers and parents, including parent Roberta Brunelle (right). - PHOTO BY MATT DETURCK
  • PHOTO BY MATT DETURCK
  • Randi Weingarten (left) visited World of Inquiry school #58 to talk with teachers and parents, including parent Roberta Brunelle (right).
Weingarten arrived in Rochester yesterday to give a talk to area teachers and community leaders. And she’s touring some city schools today.

“Teachers are being blamed for Rochester being the fifth poorest city in the country,” she said. “Instead of blaming and scapegoating teachers, we need to support them. I’m hoping the new mayor [Lovely Warren] and the school board recognize this and will be more supportive.”

Regarding immediate problems facing the area’s teachers, Weingarten said that New York lawmakers and state education officials should do a better job preparing teachers to implement the new Common Core curriculum.

Taking a broader view, Weingarten said that current education reform efforts are failing.

“Stop with the fixation on testing and fixate on the whole child,” she said.

Weingarten has spent considerable time visiting countries where students appear to be outperforming US students. The most important lessons from their success: improving teacher preparation, valuing education and learning, and focusing on equity, she said.

When the scores of urban schools are subtracted from some of the international tests used to evaluate student proficiency levels, students in the US have scored the same for the last decade. Weingarten said this shows that the problems in US education have more to do