Thursday, January 19, 2006

Rebuilding Our Schools


Retired teacher Carolyn Light Bell’s Star Tribune article today has brought me to reflect on the rich Minneapolis Public School education I received and how it helped me to build a terrific life. Without my public school education, I would have been one more low-skilled worker in a nation with a $6/hour minimum wage and $400/month health insurance cost.

In her secondary school classes of 33 to 36 students, Carolyn writes that “many students read at a second grade level, and have severe physical, emotional, and psychological problems.” She does not mention the growing number of children taking multiple regimens of psychotropic medications that complicate understanding or dealing with her students.

Carolyn points out how hard it has become to get teachers to teach in the inner city because of the painful experiences they have had. Many teachers leave city schools and take reduced salaries to work in private schools or move into corporate jobs that don’t have the stress and pay better.

In my experience as a Hennepin County guardian ad-Litem, I see the impossible stresses and over the top situations that educators are required to deal with. Ubiquitous emotional and mental health issues in overcrowded classrooms within a community that is all too ready to blame teachers for failing schools. Decent hard working educators have become one more whipping post for people dissatisfied with their community.



We often prefer to blame someone and seek simple answers to deep issues instead of thinking through to the core of the problem. Politicians have piled on the “blame the educators” bandwagon for community troubles that plague our youth rather than learn about the children that make up our schools. Blaming educators for failing schools is like blaming prison staff for under-performing prisons (prisons are built for punishment not rehabilitation—there is little prison staff can do to impact recidivism).

Let’s begin to appreciate the impossible tasks we are asking of our educators and support them in their efforts to deal with societies growing number of At Risk Youth. This is a representative democracy, and until “we the people” make some noise to our elected leaders about our disgust with bad public policy, we are doomed to suffer from it.

Become aware of the issues. Deny politicians the easy and false answers they use instead of addressing the root causes. This is a huge problem and it needs attention. NOW.

Sunday, January 01, 2006

Policy Making


The following is one of my best of all times policy making efforts I have ever encountered. It was a note from MaryJane Westra from Fergus Falls MN;

Greetings, Mike and Happy New Year!


The hour really flew by (our radio interview with Ember Reichgott Jung).

I wanted to tell you about what we did with our local state Senator Cal Larson on Dec 24, 2003. We put him in foster care for a day. We went with the police and picked him up from his house.

We gave him a teddybear and I explained to his "mom" (his wife) that we would be taking himfrom the home "for a while" and "we will be contacting you." He cried
REAL TEARS when I asked him to get some pj's and his special blanket.

I took him to social service (by police car) and he was interviewed and given a duffle bag. Then I took him to a foster home (strangers to him)and dropped him off and actually left him for an hour.

Then I returned and took him to the doctor for an exam. The whole project took 3 hours but Senator Larson has been a friend to the agency every since! He returned to that foster family (this time as a Senator, not a 7 year old boy) and gave them Xmas presents and he has done it every year since.

Our Representative, Bud Nornes, was not interested in participating in this awareness event. We got some good media coverage. I'd be happy to do that for another legislator if you knew someone that needs enlightening. It was FUN!

Honest, Senator Larson cried real tears ..several times.. or maybe he's a good actor!

Be well, Mike. Keep in touch.

maryjane


My note to her;

If enough of us talk to our friends, neighbors, legislators & those who work and live with abused and neglected children, we will end the madness that has become America's public policy of filling the prisons, ruining our schools, and making our cities a dangerous place to live. Pass it on.


Mike Tikkanen