Opinion
Teaching Profession CTQ Collaboratory

Let’s Get Rid of Those Teaching-Profession Clichés

By Sandy Merz — September 01, 2015 4 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

Every teacher-leader event I’ve attended in the last four years has featured the following clichés:

  • “Teachers make thousands of decisions a day.”
  • “Just because the public spends years as students doesn’t mean they know anything about teaching.”
  • “Teachers don’t really get summers off.”

Each time, members of the audience nod in agreement or purse their lips and shake their heads in despair. Before they became clichés, these thoughts helped us think differently. Now, they’re leading us to think placidly. That can’t help the teacher-leader movement. Therefore, unless we retool these “truths,” we should give them a rest. Here are some ideas how.

Teachers Make Thousands of Decisions a Day

Teaching is a decision-driven skill, but we dilute the nature and impact of the decisions we make by clumping them together in a single number. If I’m going to talk about the decisions teachers make, I’m going to emphasize the panorama of decisions we do make. Our responses to students can build them up or bring them down. Lesson planning takes hours of contemplation. Impactful and meaningful committee decisions may take years to enact. Personal career decision may change one’s life.

Someone might say that everyone understands the range of our decisionmaking. But did you ever wonder how many decisions you made each day before someone told you?

Someone else might object that it takes too much time to talk about the nature or our decisionmaking. But if it’s worth talking about at all, isn’t it worth talking about it in depth?

Finally, what improves the public image of teaching—a dubious datum or a brief expository? If I weren’t in the profession and a teacher said, “You know, I make thousands of decisions a day,” I’d say, “Name them. Heck, name 100.”

Potential rewording: “Accomplished teachers possess an intricate and unique skill set for decisionmaking. We make innumerable decisions on a broad range of time scales that impact a broad spectrum of issues and people.”

Having Been a Student Doesn’t Qualify Someone to Judge Teachers

it does, within limits. A high school graduate has spent some 14,000 hours in school with dozens of different teachers. That is fair data set to judge how well teachers execute the visible part of their work.

Here are some thoughts that surface whenever I hear this cliché:

  • Teachers often promote policies using their experience as students rather than their expertise as teachers. I’ve heard this a lot when we discuss issues such as discipline and retention.
  • We never discount public opinions aligned with our own as invalid on the grounds that the public isn’t qualified.
  • We should talk as much about how the media and the public’s experience with their children’s teachers influence their opinions as much as their own experience as students.

But the public’s judgement on teaching isn’t comprehensive. A deeper exploration would identify the areas in which teachers should pay close attention to the public’s criticisms and in which the public should defer to teachers’ expertise.

A comparison to medicine works here. We’re qualified as patients to judge our doctors’ accessibility, demeanor, and how well we fair under their care. We’re not qualified to understand how they interpret our symptoms in light of their better knowledge.

Members of the public are qualified to judge the visible part of teaching, particularly how well it helps students learn. They’re not qualified to understand how teachers apply their specialized knowledge of teaching and learning.

Potential rewording: “Teachers should encourage the public to judge our public performance. We should also work to make the specialized nature of our work more appreciated.”

Teachers Don’t Really Get Summers Off

I get summers off. I know that’s a heresy in teacher-leader circles, but I’ll stand by it. From the last day in May to the first day in August, I have over 60 days to spend any way I want. There have been summers where I didn’t work a minute.

I’ll nearly always choose to update my lessons, attend conferences, and help facilitate professional-development events (often for compensation). But no one is twisting my arm to do this; I am exercising my autonomy. I have chosen to enrich my identity as a teacher to include outside leadership work.

Furthermore my summer professional activities are nothing like what I do in the classroom. They are not as hard or time-consuming. They renew me, help me deepen my commitment to the profession, and are fun. That could be said of teaching, too, but in a different way.

The end of a school year may be happy and sad, but it usually is a relief. Yet, no matter how motivated or eager we are to begin a new year, is it ever a relief? Why should we be indignant when someone says, “It must be nice to get summers off?” Why is it even brought up during teaching events? Are we that insecure?

Someone is more likely to tell me that I deserve a break after teaching nine months or ask what it’s like and what I do with the time. In fact I’ve heard far more teachers complain about people putting us down for lounging around all summer than I’ve heard people actually make those comments.

Potential rewording: “I celebrate summers! What other profession has two consecutive months during which practitioners can create their own path—to improve themselves as teachers, to rest, to travel. It’s a great thing and everyone should envy us!”

Teacher leaders make their bones first by accomplished classroom work, then by original thinking. As the efficacy of teacher leadership grows, let’s keep our eyes out for the complacency in language that leads to complacency in thinking.

Events

School Climate & Safety K-12 Essentials Forum Strengthen Students’ Connections to School
Join this free event to learn how schools are creating the space for students to form strong bonds with each other and trusted adults.
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Assessment Webinar
Standards-Based Grading Roundtable: What We've Achieved and Where We're Headed
Content provided by Otus
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Reading & Literacy Webinar
Creating Confident Readers: Why Differentiated Instruction is Equitable Instruction
Join us as we break down how differentiated instruction can advance your school’s literacy and equity goals.
Content provided by Lexia Learning

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

Teaching Profession Inside the First-Ever White House State Dinner for Teachers
Teachers were feted by first lady Jill Biden and other national leaders, with a surprise appearance by a powerful dignitary.
6 min read
Jill Biden applauds teachers during the first-ever Teachers of the Year state dinner at the White House.
Jill Biden applauds teachers during the first-ever Teachers of the Year state dinner at the White House on May 2, 2024.
Kaylee Domzalski/Education Week
Teaching Profession The New Taylor Swift Song That's Become a 'Teacher Anthem'
The lyric "I cry a lot, but I am so productive—it's an art," is resonating with teachers.
2 min read
Taylor Swift performs as part of the "Eras Tour" at the Tokyo Dome on Feb. 7, 2024, in Tokyo.
Taylor Swift performs as part of the Eras Tour at the Tokyo Dome on Feb. 7, 2024, in Tokyo.
Toru Hanai/AP
Teaching Profession Letter to the Editor Change the Workplace, Not the Person, to Fight Burnout
A science teacher argues that eliminating burnout is not the responsibility of teachers.
1 min read
Education Week opinion letters submissions
Gwen Keraval for Education Week
Teaching Profession Opinion Transitioning Out of Teaching Is Hard. Here's What I've Learned
For teachers looking to change careers, the skills they’ve honed in the classroom don’t always easily translate to their resume.
Julie Packett
5 min read
A solitary woman is highlighted in a spotlight.
iStock/Getty Images