Tuesday, September 16, 2014

1st Latina NEA President’s Concern: Testing, Teacher Pay and Undocumented Students « NewsTaco

1st Latina NEA President’s Concern: Testing, Teacher Pay and Undocumented Students « NewsTaco:



1st Latina NEA President’s Concern: Testing, Teacher Pay and Undocumented Students



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 By Manuel De La Rosa, NewsTaco

The president of the nation’s largest teachers group visited the Rio Grande Valley in Texas as part of a two-day tour to discuss standardized testing, low teacher’s pay and undocumented children in the classroom.
National Education Association President Lily Eskelsen Garcia used her “Back to School Tour” to speak to Rio Grande Valley superintendents, administrators, teachers and students. As part of the tour, Garcia has visited several areas, including New York, Florida, Alaska and Texas.
Garcia is the first-ever Latina elected to hold office for the largest teacher’s organization in the United States and represents about three million teachers throughout the nation. She was elected President last July and began her term on September 1st.
“This is like a dream come true for me,” said Garcia who spoke to Newstaco at the Texas State Teacher’s Association office in Brownsville. “I wanted to get more involved with my association because schools needed so much and I wanted to reach for something because our kids needed something special.” 
Garcia, whose mother is from Panama, came to the educational front line to see how teachers are dealing with the influx of immigrant children, mostly from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala.  U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials estimated 66,000 undocumented children have crossed the border without the parents since last October.
“I want to ask the teachers, ‘how do you do it (and) what kind of advice can you give your colleagues that might be looking at this for the first time?,” said Garcia. “’What are you dealing with in that school building to have families and children feel they are loved in school. What are you doing to have that school community accept these transient populations that go in and out so often?’”
She also went into attack mode, criticizing the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills, or TAKS test.
“The high stakes standardized testing has come to corrupt in what it means to teach and what it means to learn,” Garcia told 1st Latina NEA President’s Concern: Testing, Teacher Pay and Undocumented Students « NewsTaco: