TEACHERS, DON'T JUST SHUT UP AND TEACH
Our political system is
out of balance
By John Waldron, July
12, 2019
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TEACHERS, DON'T JUST SHUT UP AND TEACH
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This is the story of the
way forward.
There's a saying I read in an education manual
that has stuck with me: The other side of the coin has another side. Last November, I was elected to the Oklahoma
state legislature as one of those angry teachers demanding better school
funding. I was one of 24 Democrats working alongside 77 Republicans in my
deep-red state's House of Representatives. Some things didn't go so well for me
in this first session, as you may have read in the essays I've been writing for
Education Week. I authored several bills. They all died. I debated against some
pretty awful examples of cut-and-paste legislation from the American
Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), a national organization that promotes
conservative legislation at the state level. One such bill, for example,
required doctors to notify patients of a scientifically unproven method of
reversing the effects of "day after" drugs used in abortions. They
all passed. We ended the session with an improved budget for next year, but the
legislative leadership chose to deposit $200 million dollars of unallocated
revenue into a state savings account—revenue that could have been used to fully
fund smaller classroom sizes.
It felt lonely to be in such a small minority,
kept out of the discussions that matter. In the minority role, your primary
purpose is to call into question the wisdom of the majority. That's an
important function. History provides an example of American government under
single-party rule: the Confederacy. Lacking a competitive party structure, it
failed to build consensus and govern effectively. Individual party barons and
interests obstructed the Confederate government at every turn, resisting
policies to control inflation, enforce conscription, or finance the government.
More From This Author:
"I Was Tired of How Politicians Treated
Teachers. So I Became a Politician"
"I Was an Angry Teacher Fighting for Better
Education Policy. Now, I'm Shaping It"
"Who Shows Up for Teachers?
Coalition-Building in the Era of Educator Activism"
A similar dysfunction manifests itself today in
the kind of interest-group politics we see in deep-red or deep-blue states.
It's all too easy for powerful interests to push the policies they want with
the ruling party leadership, because they know the opposition is too weak to
stop them.
It's not that the other side of the coin is
evil. Our system is just out of balance. I learned that "the other
guys" are for the most part good, honorable people. They just have a
different point of view. But there are some who are in government chasing power
and money, and it's harder to constrain those individuals when a single-party
power structure prevails. In states with de facto one-party rule, there's no
check on individual ambition, other than from within the ruling party itself.
However, the party wants to remain united for the sake of holding on to power,
leaving the minority party in the role of Cassandra—the Trojan priestess whose
warnings about trouble ahead went unheeded.
In this environment, education becomes a
battleground issue. Lobbyists for private interest groups can promote school
privatization through voucher bills, call for tax cuts at the expense of public
services, and suppress collective bargaining for teachers. All they have to do
is leverage one party, whose lopsided majority allows leaders to favor narrow
interests without worrying that their power might slip. They profit from the
polarization of contemporary politics.
TEACHERS, DON'T JUSTSHUT UP AND TEACH
"As teachers, we need to realize that teaching
is a political act."
So, how do we as educators change the narrative?
As teachers, we need to realize that teaching is a political act. It affects
everyone, and therefore we need to advocate for good policies that invest
public resources wisely in the common good. We can no longer shut up and teach.
We have to speak out. We should do so politely, resolutely, and with the facts
on our side. And we need to build bridges to communities that feel alienated by
modern school bureaucracy. For example, we need effective strategies that
combat bullying with restorative justice and by modeling civil society. And we
need to provide effective resources for addressing this generation's challenges
in mental health.
Public schools need to reassert their role as a
public square of American discourse—a place where citizens learn from each
other and appreciate different points of view. By teaching good, old-fashioned
critical thinking, we can prepare another generation to do better in the
digital age. One of the reasons we have so many states run by one party is that
we have learned to vilify the other side rather than listen to it.
This fall, for the first time in 20 years, I
won't be teaching in a public school. As a legislator, I cannot be on another
state payroll, so I'll look for jobs in private schools. It's ironic that I had
to give up the job I loved to try to save the public school system I love.
But I don't regret the choice. I believe public
service is honorable, and I look forward to coming to the next session of the
legislature with more experience and a better sense of how to get things done.
I believe that the fight for better policies, for public education, and a host
of other issues, is a good fight.
And I believe it's not too late to fix American
politics. Most people in both parties recognize the need for a healthy public
school system. And I need to assure colleagues on the other side of the aisle
that I am not the enemy. I'm part of the solution—the other side of the coin.
John Waldron taught for 20 years at Booker T.
Washington High School in Tulsa, Okla., where he was named a finalist for state
teacher of the year. He was elected to the state legislature as a Democrat in
November 2018. This is the final essay in a series he has written for Education
Week on the transition from teaching to legislating.
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