I Am a Teacher in Florida

2/6/10 Editor: This was found a a Facebook page during the days immediately preceeding the vote for the House version of SB6. The post was so long it was painstakingly broken up into the alloted comment space, one comment after another. It is posted here in full because it is easier to read in one location. I do not know Cagle Miller-Jamee, but she speaks to me and many others. It is her story and, at the same time, our story too.  Enjoy.
 
I rise before dawn each day and find myself nestled in my classroom hours before the morning commute is in full swing in downtown Orlando. I scour the web along with countless other resources to create meaningful learning experiences for my 24 students each day. I reflect on the successes of lessons taught and re-work ideas until I feel confident that they will meet the needs of my diverse learners. I have finished my third cup of coffee in my classroom before the business world has stirred. My contracted hours begin at 7:00 and end at 3:00. As the sun sets around me and people are beginning to enjoy their dinner, I lock my classroom door, having worked 4 hours unpaid.

  

  

I greet the smiling faces of my students and am reminded anew of their challenges, struggles, successes, failures, quirks, and needs. I review their 504s, their IEPs, their PMPs, their histories trying to reach them from every angle possible. They come in hungry—I feed them. They come in angry—I counsel them. They come in defeated—I encourage them. And this is all before the bell rings. 

  

I am a teacher in Florida. 

  

I am told that every student in my realm must score on or above grade level on the FCAT each year. Never mind their learning discrepancies, their unstable home lives, their prior learning experiences. In the spring, they are all assessed with one measure and if they don’t fit, I have failed. Students walk through my doors reading at a second grade level and by year’s end can independently read and comprehend early 4th grade texts, but this is no matter. One of my students has already missed 30 school days this year, but that is overlooked. If they don’t perform well on this ONE test in early March, their learning gains are irrelevant. They didn’t learn enough. They didn’t grow enough. I failed them. In the three months that remain in the school year after this test, I am expected to begin teaching 5th grade curriculum to my 4th grade students so that they are prepared for next year’s test. 

  

I am a teacher in Florida. 

  

I am expected to create a culture of students who will go on to become the leaders of our world. When they exit my classroom, they should be fully equipped to compete academically on a global scale. They must be exposed to different worldviews and diverse perspectives, and yet, most of my students have never left Sanford, Florida. Field trips are now frivolous. I must provide new learning opportunities for them without leaving the four walls of our classroom. So I plan. I generate new ways to expose them to life beyond their neighborhoods through online exploration and digital field trips. I stay up past The Tonight Show to put together a unit that will allow them to experience St. Augustine without getting on a bus. I spend weekends taking pictures and creating a virtual world for them to experience, since the State has determined it is no longer worthwhile for them to explore reality. Yes. My students must be prepared to work within diverse communities, and yet they are not afforded the right to ever experience life beyond their own town. 

  

I am a teacher in Florida. 

  

I accepted a lower salary with the promise of a small increase for every year taught. I watched my friends with less education than me sign on for six figure jobs while I embraced my $28k starting salary. I was assured as I signed my contract that although it was meager to start, my salary would consistently grow each year. That promise has been broken. I’m still working with a meager salary, and the steps that were contracted to me when I accepted a lower salary are now deemed “unnecessary.” 

  

I am a teacher in Florida. 

  

I spent $2500 in my first year alone to outfit an empty room so that it would promote creative thinking and a desire to learn and explore. I now average between $1000-2000 that I pay personally to supplement the learning experiences that take place in my classroom. I print at home on my personal printer and have burned through 12 ink cartridges this school year alone. I purchase the school supplies my students do not have. I buy authentic literature so my students can be exposed to authors and worlds beyond their textbooks. I am required to teach Social Studies and Writing without any curriculum/materials provided, so I purchase them myself. I am required to conduct Science lab without Science materials, so I buy those, too. The budgeting process has determined that copies of classroom materials are too costly, so I resort to paying for my copies at Staples, refusing to compromise my students’ education because high-ranking officials are making inappropriate cuts. It is February, and my entire class is out of glue sticks. Since I have already spent the $74 allotted to me for warehouse supplies, if I don’t buy more, we will not have glue for the remainder of the year. The projects I dream up are limited by the incomprehensible lack of financial support. I am expected to inspire my students to become lifelong learners, and yet we don’t have the resources needed to nurture their natural sense of wonder if I don’t purchase them myself. My meager earning is now pathetic after the expenses that come with teaching effectively. 

  

I am a teacher in Florida. 

  

The government has scolded me for failing to prepare my students to compete in this technologically driven world. Students in Japan are much more equipped to think progressively with regards to technology. Each day, I turn on the two computers afforded me and pray for a miracle. I apply for grants to gain new access to technology and compete with thousands of other teachers who are hoping for the same opportunity. I battle for the right to use the computer lab and feel fortunate if my students get to see it once a week. Why don’t they know how to use technology? The system’s budget refuses to include adequate technology in classrooms; instead, we are continually told that dry erase boards and overhead projectors are more than enough. 

  

I am a teacher in Florida. 


I went to school at one of the best universities in the country and completed undergraduate and graduate programs in Education. I am a master of my craft. I know what effective teaching entails, and I know how to manage the curriculum and needs of the diverse learners in my full inclusion classroom. I graduated at the top of my class and entered my first year of teaching confident and equipped to teach effectively. Sadly, I am now being micro-managed, with my instruction dictated to me. I am expected to mold “out-of-the-box” thinkers while I am forced to stay within the lines of the instructional plans mandated by policy-makers. I am told what I am to teach and when, regardless of the makeup of my students, by decision-makers far away from my classroom or even my school. The message comes in loud and clear that a group of people in business suits can more effectively determine how to provide exemplary instruction than I can. My expertise is waved away, disregarded, and overlooked. I am treated like a day-laborer, required to follow the steps mapped out for me, rather than blaze a trail that I deem more appropriate and effective for my students—students these decision-makers have never met.
 


I am a teacher in Florida.
 

  

I am overworked, underpaid, and unappreciated by most. I spend my weekends, my vacations, and my summers preparing for school, and I constantly work to improve my teaching to meet the needs of my students. I am being required to do more and more, and I’m being compensated less and less. 

  

I am a teacher in Florida, not for the pay or the hardships, the disregard or the disrespect; I am a teacher in Florida because I am given the chance to change lives for the good, to educate and elevate the minds and hearts of my students, and to show them that success comes in all shapes and sizes, both in the classroom and in the community. 

  

I am a teacher in Florida today, but as I watch many of my incredible, devoted coworkers being forced out of the profession as a matter of survival, I wonder: How long will I be able to remain a teacher in Florida? 

  

 

Cagle Miller-Jamee

  

  

 

24 Comments

  1. I love tangerineflorida.com, bookmarked for future reference

  2. Check it out…

    I Am A Teacher, Too

  3. […] I Am a Teacher in Florida April 2010 22 comments 3 […]

  4. I am a high school student in Florida. Just this year I have seen some of the best teachers laid-off. Not just a teacher with a college degree and a descent resume. Teachers who inspire those who aren’t inspired. Who takes the time with students and encourage them to do their work and come to class on time. We lost more than just a teacher we lost, life coaches. So this goes out to Mr. Pauling: what gives u the gall to citicize how Mrs. Miller adressess her feelings about how she feels about her school. My high school has lost a Mrs. Miller or two or EIGHT. And because arrogant “know it all’s” like yourself are to busy___________(feel free to fill in the blank) you fail to realize that us students need Mrs. Millers and without them education will fail. Ohand one more thing I hope potential teachers do actually read Mrs. Miller’s poem because they should know what in store for them. I honestly can’t believe that you would hint that they shouldn’t know how teachers feel. I find you (Mr.Pauling) to be nothing more than a charlatan. (Charlatan- fake, fraud, pretender, quack, impostor)

  5. Good for Mrs. Cagle Miller for expressing herself. I have read she was voted teacher of the year in Seminole County. I would expect that any teacher that has earned this title/award would have done above and beyond what most of us would expect. I have also read that she is a graduate from Florida and that she, along with her husband, have setup a fellowship in order to support the school system with updated computers. The truth is this is a sad poem, especially for students that are motivated to become teachers. I have to say Mrs. Cagle Miller, the career you selected and I have also chosen for my future, as did my wife, is not rewarded monetarily – and this has never been a secret. The benefit of being a teacher is for the love of helping children have the opportunity to learn and succeed. You certainly have the right to write your poem any way you like, but if you don’t like your job or any aspects of it then you must either find a job you enjoy more or try the best you can to make things better (which it seems like you have already done, but may be burnt out). You had the opportunity and still do to take a six figure salary job just like the friends you watched, another person will take your job, especially today! My point is that the complaining is not going to get you anywhere, except it may allow you to temporarily feel better and rile up some others. Use your intelligence to do the best you can to correct some of these things or find another career.

    Editor: I do not see this as complaining. “I am a Teacher” simply states facts regardless of how detractors try to frame it.

    • To the writer of the above comment regarding the fact that this teacher should deal with it or get another job. You obviously don’t GET any of what you have read. There might be someone willing to take her place if she leaves, but dedicated, truly professional, energetic teachers with expereince are very few and far between. You are clueless.

  6. TangerineFl is proud to have started the trend that took this post viral. =]

    http://neatoday.org/2010/04/21/florida-teacher-issues-rallying-cry-for-respect-for-educators/

  7. Fellow teachers, parents and others interested in quality education for children: please join us on our Facebook page. We need to show Gov Crist that we have the support of the American people. Thank you!

    http://www.facebook.com/pages/?act=18253069#!/pages/No-Senate-Bill-6/111222552221919

    • You’ll need to copy and paste the link in your browser. It’s too long. Thanks for your support!

  8. Her name is Jamee Cagle-Miller, and I am proud to say that I have worked with her before. She was able to so eloquently put into words how we are all feeling right now. Editor: Thank you for your comment. I’ve had her name at the bottom since I posted it. I don’t know if she posted it or if someone else did. She speaks for all of us.

  9. I am a teacher in California.
    I was saddened to read your essay. Please don’t give up. Please persevere. I am praying that your governor does not sign SB6, but I am also getting the word out here in California about the plight of teachers in Florida. This is not only an issue in Florida, but if this bill were passed, so might go the entire nation. Good luck to you.

  10. Madness. Is this the future of the whole country if and when the GOP wrests back control of our nation? God help us and our children!

  11. Thank you for speaking up for all of the teachers who care, who promote excellence, and who work tirelessly for the children that they are charged with.

  12. Another Teacher post “I Teach Middle School Science in Florida and SB6 is a Bad Bill”

    I Teach Middle School Science and SB6 is a BAD Bill

  13. See also: No Dentists Left Behind

    No Dentists Left Behind

  14. […] compromising their beliefs about kids and learning. They don’t even feel like they can speak out or support one another in doing the right thing. Those who do speak up or act out feel like […]

  15. […]  I greet the smiling faces of my students and am reminded anew of their challenges, struggles, successes, failures, quirks, and needs. I review their 504s, their IEPs, their PMPs, their histories trying to reach them from every angle possible. They come in hungry—I feed them. They come in angry—I counsel them. They come in defeated—I encourage them. And this is all before the bell rings.  […]

  16. Well written. Everything you wrote reflects how I feel and how all of my colleagues feel. Thank you for stating it so eloquently. I have taught in 3 states. I have never worked with such professional, hard- working teachers than I have here Florida and I am still amazed at how we are treated by the public and the politicians. I hope to be leaving Florida as soon as possible. Editor: I did not write this but wish I could have expressed myself as well as the author did. I too, have been thinking of leaving Florida.

  17. […] future. We live in an American society right now in which everyone from the President on down denigrates teachers as somehow greedy, lazy, badly trained, irresponsible people. We send our children off to schools after the President has applauded firing their teachers, after […] Editor- So true =/

  18. […] Posted on April 6, 2010 by anneweaver 1. I am a teacher https://tangerinefl.wordpress.com/2010/04/02/i-am-a-teacher-in-florida/ 2. Site full of images, sounds and video clips that can be freely used as long as attribution is […]

  19. […] my quest for better systems, better support, and better exposure for teachers this is a truthful, heartfelt blog about the situation teachers find themselves […]

  20. […] I Am a Teacher in Florida « Tangerine, Florida I rise before dawn each day and find myself nestled in my classroom hours before the morning commute is in full swing in downtown Orlando. I scour the web along with countless other resources to create meaningful learning experiences for my 24 students each day. I reflect on the successes of lessons taught and re-work ideas until I feel confident that they will meet the needs of my diverse learners. I have finished my third cup of coffee in my classroom before the business world has stirred. My contracted hours begin at 7:00 and end at 3:00. As the sun sets around me and people are beginning to enjoy their dinner, I lock my classroom door, having worked 4 hours unpaid. (tags: teaching) « Learning from a Book  Email This Post  Print This Post […]


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