iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Teach For America Met With Big Questions In Face Of Expansion

Teach For America

By CHRISTINE ARMARIO   11/27/11 09:14 AM ET   AP

MIAMI -- In a distressed neighborhood north of Miami's gleaming downtown, a group of enthusiastic but inexperienced instructors from Teach for America is trying to make progress where more veteran teachers have had difficulty: raising students' reading and math scores.

"These are the lowest performing schools, so we need the strongest performing teachers," said Julian Davenport, an assistant principal at Holmes Elementary, where three-fifths of the staff this year are Teach for America corps members or graduates of the program.

By 2015, with the help of a $50 million federal grant, program recruits could make up one-quarter of all new teachers in 60 of the nation's highest need school districts. The program also is expanding internationally.

That growth comes as many districts try to make teachers more effective. But Teach for America has had mixed results.

Its teachers perform about as well as other novice instructors, who tend to be less successful than their more experienced colleagues. Even when they do slightly better, there's a serious offset: The majority are out of the teaching profession within five years.

"I think ultimately the jury is out," said Tony Wagner, a professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, and an instructor to the first class of TFA corps members.

Teach for America teachers work with not just the poor, but also English language learners and special education students. They provide an important pipeline of new teachers. But critics cite the teachers' high turnover rate, limited training and inexperience and say they are perpetuating the same inequalities that Teach for America has set to eradicate.

"There's no question that they've brought a huge number of really talented people in to the education profession," said Kati Haycock, president of The Education Trust, which advocates on behalf of low-income and minority children, and a longtime supporter of TFA.

But, she said, "Nobody should teach in a high poverty school without having already demonstrated that they are a fabulous teacher. For poor kids, education has to work every single year."

___

Wendy Kopp started Teach for America while studying public policy at Princeton. For her senior thesis, she developed a plan to place top college graduates in the poorest schools. She sent the plan to dozens of Fortune 500 executives. Within a year, she had raised $2.5 million and had 2,500 applications.

Over the past 20 years, thousands of recent college graduates have taught for two years in some of the most challenging classrooms in hopes of helping close the achievement gap. Applications have doubled since 2008. Foundations have donated tens of millions.

With Teach for America's guidance, groups are being established in India, Chile and other places with deep educational inequalities.

Many countries, including those where students perform higher in math and reading, send the strongest and most experienced teachers to work with the lowest performing students. The U.S. has done the reverse. There are nearly twice as many teachers with fewer than three years' experience in schools where students are predominantly low income and minority.

Family income is one of the most accurate predictors of how well a student will perform. Just 18 percent of low-income eighth-grade students, for example, scored as proficient or above in reading on the 2011 National Assessment of Educational Progress.

"When we started this 20 years ago, the prevailing notion backed up by all the research was socio-economic circumstances determine educational outcomes," Kopp said in an interview with The Associated Press. "We've seen real evidence it does not have to be that way."

How to overcome the challenges of poverty is at the center of the debate over education reform, with an increasing focus on effective teaching.

Highly effective teachers are hardest to find at the least advantaged schools.

"The reality, particularly in urban centers in America, is they aren't there," said Tim Knowles, director of the Urban Education Institute at the University of Chicago, who served as the founding director for Teach for America in New York City.

___

Teach for America believes it can create a corps of such teachers in a short time.

Research, however, shows that beginning instructors improve with experience.

A Harvard study of students in Texas found that a teacher's level of education, experience, and scores on licensing exams have a greater influence on student performance than any other factor. North Carolina research on teacher training programs, including Teach for America, showed that elementary students taught math by a first-year teacher lose the equivalent of 21 days of schooling compared with students who had teachers with four years of experience.

If inexperienced teachers don't perform as well, then why pair them with students who struggle the most?

"When they started, we were staffing our high poverty schools ... with anything that breathed," said Haycock. But, she added, "Saying their solution is better than what came before it is not to say it's the right thing."

Wagner noted that his master's degree in teaching from Harvard hardly prepared him for the challenges of being a first-year teacher. "Unless and until we have a dramatically different system, and a universally high quality system for preparing teachers, I think TFA is a stop gap, and an important one," he said.

___

Most who apply for Teach for America have not studied education or thought about teaching, but consider it after speaking with a recruiter or program graduate.

For Ryan Winn, it was a picture of a recruiter's third-grade class in Phoenix that persuaded him to apply. The recruiter told him that half the students were expected to drop out by the eighth grade.

"That struck me as incredibly unfair and I was upset about it," said Winn, a teacher this year in Memphis, Tenn.

At Holmes Elementary in Miami, the classrooms of Teach for America teachers are filled with posters reminding students of the ambitious goals set for them.

"I have to make a change," said Michael Darmas, a first-year teacher at Holmes. "I have to make a difference."

Teach for America training starts with thick packages of readings and then five weeks co-teaching a summer class, usually in an urban school district, with students who have fallen behind and are taking remedial coursework in order to advance to the next grade.

The fledgling teachers are overseen by another instructor. That could be a more veteran public school teacher, or current or former Teach for America corps member.

"It was a real steep learning curve," said Sarahi Constantine Padilla, a recent Stanford University graduate teaching at Holmes.

When the summer is over, teachers are sent to their assigned districts, which pay up to $5,000 to Teach for America for each corps member they hire, in addition to the teacher's salary. Many don't find out exactly what they'll be teaching until shortly before school begins.

In interviews with nearly two dozen Teach for America corps members, many described classroom triumphs. Several also acknowledged feeling dubious about their abilities as first-year teachers.

"I struggled personally with my ability to be effective, and I think the gains my kids achieved were largely in spite of me," said Brett Barley, who taught in the San Francisco Bay area. "I thought the key thing I was able to bring to them was communicating the urgency of the predicament they faced and having them buy in to the idea they could be successful."

Most of the fourth-graders Barley taught entered reading and writing at second-grade levels. About 30 percent weren't native English speakers; two were classified as blind.

"The biggest challenge was trying to learn on the job to meet all the kids at their different skill levels," Barley said.

In her book, "A Chance to Make History," Kopp tells the stories of several Teach for America teachers who achieved remarkable success in the classroom. But it's not hard to find teachers who come out with a very different story about their experience.

Megan Hopkins, a Spanish major in college who was placed in Phoenix as a bilingual teacher, said she did not receive any training on teaching English language learners.

"I had no idea how to teach a child to read," Hopkins said. "I had no idea how to teach a second language learner to read in Spanish, much less in English. After five weeks of training, I really had no idea what I was doing. I felt that was a big disservice to my students."

Teach for America encouraged her to set a goal of advancing her students 1 1/2 grade levels. She didn't know how to go about building such a measurement, but was able to develop one with other teachers.

Hopkins said she was praised "up and down" for increasing student reading levels, but she questioned the results. One student, a native Spanish speaker, could read fluently in English, "but if you asked him what he read, he had absolutely no idea."

___

Teach for America, in its own review of external research, concludes that its teachers achieve student gains that are "at least as great as that of other new teachers." In some studies they do better, and in others they do worse.

Teach for America gathers information on how its teachers are performing, but does not release any data to the public. "We just don't feel it's responsible to show," Kopp said. "There are so many flaws in our system."

One consistent finding is Teach for America's high turnover rate. According to the organization, 33 percent of its graduates are still teaching. But in many districts, retention rates are significantly lower. A study published last year from North Carolina, for example, found that after five years, 7 percent of Teach for America corps members were still teaching in the state.

Kopp and others at Teach for America note turnover rates are high across low-income schools. But among teacher preparation programs, Teach for America has one of the highest.

She said requiring a two-year commitment is critical to attracting high quality candidates. The main reason Teach for America teachers leave the classroom, Kopp said, is because they want to have a bigger impact. Sixty percent of the program's graduates are still working in education, whether it's in policy, or for a nonprofit or government agency, according to TFA.

Throughout their time with Teach for America, corps members are frequently told about the organization's "theory of change." It's the idea that, no matter what field they ultimately enter, they will remain committed to fixing educational inequalities.

Many of the graduates interviewed for this story did leave teaching.

Hopkins, the Phoenix teacher, earned a doctorate in education and has focused much of her research on English language learners.

"But what if their theory of change would encourage their teachers to stay in the classroom as a form of change, as a form of leadership in the field of education?" she asked.

___

At Holmes Elementary, much is at stake.

If the state isn't granted a waiver from the federal education law known as No Child Left Behind, the school could close unless it significantly improves math and reading scores on Florida's standardized assessment.

"I like the pressure," said third-grade teacher Daniel Guerrero. "It makes me want to stay up late and make sure everything is ready."

Assistant Superintendent Nikolai Vitti says clustering Teach for America teachers together has worked in other district schools and he hopes to attract more beyond their two-year commitment.

Davenport, the assistant principal and a program alumnus, said that will depend on whether corps members feel valued.

"If they don't feel that opportunity to exercise their abilities," he said, "they won't be compelled to stay."

___

Online:

FOLLOW HUFFPOST EDUCATION

MIAMI -- In a distressed neighborhood north of Miami's gleaming downtown, a group of enthusiastic but inexperienced instructors from Teach for America is trying to make progress where more veteran tea...
MIAMI -- In a distressed neighborhood north of Miami's gleaming downtown, a group of enthusiastic but inexperienced instructors from Teach for America is trying to make progress where more veteran tea...
Filed by Emmeline Zhao  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 895
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Bloggers
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (13 total)
01:07 PM on 01/15/2012
Teach for America is doing really good work.
photo
Righteous Fury
The history of all hitherto existing society is ..
11:40 PM on 01/22/2012
...in keeping down the pension costs for various school districts by providing temporary employees who have no thought of retiring as teachers.
11:50 AM on 12/01/2011
I'd like to add my views as a TFA alum (Kansas City '08).

Most of the complaints about Teach For America seem--in my opinion--to avoid the most obvious issue. The problems with low-income schools tend to come from two areas: (1) the students and families themselves and (2) the inept, non-educator, and overly political leadership that often exists in urban districts.

I taught in a school that was roughly 9% proficient on state exams. When I arrived, I fully believed the TFA rhetoric about how poor performance on state exams and other problems are largely issues of teacher quality. In very little time, I realized that was a bunch of rubbish. The teachers in my school were very talented and did a great job.

So if the teachers weren't the problem, then what was?

As I mentioned, it came down to the students and the school administration.

Never in my life have I met such disrespectful, angry, spoiled (yes...spoiled), bitter, and careless people. This wasn't to say that all were that way, but many were. They often showed zero interest in learning anything, and they made it very clear that they weren't interested in obtaining an education.

Add to that that probably 5-10% of the students in each class I taught were chronically disruptive to the point that all of their teachers (I taught only science) were forced to spend a majority of their instruction time attempting to maintain order.

(CONTINUED BELOW)
11:52 AM on 12/01/2011
(...CONTINUED FROM ABOVE)

These students started constant fights, ran the halls for hours, destroyed lab equipment, vandalized the building, assaulted teachers and other adults, threatened to kill classmates, engaged in sexual acts during school, tore up assignments, and did numerous other things that should have never been tolerated.

The students who wanted to learn essentially had their education stolen.

Our school administration neglected to deal with this. Instead, we had a high-profile superintendent (John Covington, who is now in Michigan) who never visited my school, actually blamed teachers for poor student behavior, and spent his time trying to push for very political and ineffective "reform" efforts. He did such a poor job that the district is now unaccredited. Like many urban school leaders, he focused on small issues and ignored the elephant in the room: that the schools were so out of control that learning simply wasn't going to take place.

Teach For America, in making an issue of teacher quality, is essentially trying to fix a gunshot wound by applying a band-aid. It may stop the flow of blood here and there, but there's a much deeper issue causing the bleeding.

To be honest, I don't know if we can actually "fix" the students and their families. But, we can certainly not allow violent and disruptive students to destroy entire schools and rob their classmates of their education. Until this matter is addressed, districts like my former one in Kansas City are doomed to failure.
11:33 AM on 11/30/2011
As one of the teachers in the article alluded to, TFA's biggest contribution to ed reform is as a stop-gap; you have to stem the bleeding before fixing the root problem. NCLB, race to the top, and the current fixation on teacher effectiveness are not looking at the roots of the problem, as there are many non-school factors that contribute to low student outcomes.

However if teaching is so important - as many of these proponents believe, then they should reform the whole teacher prep process; in other words invest in the beginning not in the end:

http://TheEducatedSociety.com/teacher-accountability-starts-with-better-teacher-preparation/
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mskitty71
08:05 AM on 11/30/2011
I am a teacher and I wish there was an equivalent of this program to become a lawyer. I could just study for 5 weeks and then get hired at regular lawyer pay. I think it's only fair. I have been to court many times: driving tickets, divorce, child support. I also watched Matlock, Perry Mason reruns, Law and Order. That makes me a perfect candidate! I want to make a difference. It's only fair.
07:02 PM on 01/04/2012
Amen, sister. I guess my education degree doesn't mean much to TFA.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Gary Stager
09:31 PM on 11/29/2011
Qualified experienced educators are losing their jobs and young people with Masters degrees and teaching credentials can not find employment. Why is the Federal government, along with many states and districts, investing in union-busting schemes like Teach-for-America?

What sort of pixie dust is sprinkled upon these missionaries sent to teach where we are led to believe others have failed for years? How is it that so many major urban superintendents have no qualifications whatsoever?

Teach-for-America proves over and over again that in America today, unqualified is the new qualified.

PS: Why does The Huffington Post continue to cheerlead for schemes like this that cheat our children, undermine democracy and destroy middle class careers?
03:30 AM on 11/29/2011
The problem isn't with TFA or its mission, it's with how TFA views itself and subsequently influences external perceptions of it. As a TFA alum, I asked myself the question from day 1: How am I qualified to be teaching these kids? The answer: I wasn't. TFA fires up its corps members with awesome propaganda that's supposed to fuel us through our early years as teachers. We have great enthusiasm, great ideas and great optimism. Unfortunately that isn't always enough to stand up to the reality of teaching in high-stakes classrooms. I am still in education and plan to remain there, but I agree that TFA in its current configuration is a "stop-gap." (We cannot lose track of the fact that SOMEBODY has to be in these classrooms, and our public education system and teacher training/credentialing programs are flawed. Furthermore, experience does not directly correlate to effective teaching—experience combined with talent and dedication does.) TFA should not be sold nor viewed as a program that produces qualified teachers. Rather, it should be viewed as a pipeline that channels largely intelligent, talented and passionate people into low performing schools with the hope that they will remain and make a positive impact.
10:48 AM on 11/29/2011
I'd rather "grow my own" than hope TFA alums stay in the program. What's absolutely wrong with the organization is the insistence that teachers give up their personal lives…something not possible after a year or two, thus making teaching a temporary job rather than a profession. My father taught in the 70s and did many things parents should be (driving kids to college interviews, tutoring after hours at kids' homes, taking kids on school sanctioned camping trip -- stuff that is legally insane to do today) early on in his career. This is the sort of thing TFA and KIPP insist on. That is not possible to do after a few years as a teacher will burn out. Plus, teachers should have a good healthy disconnect from school.
10:49 AM on 11/29/2011
meant "good healthy disconnect" when they're NOT in school!
01:06 PM on 11/29/2011
In a word: Agreed.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
traceydouglas
outside the box
09:46 PM on 11/28/2011
""These are the lowest performing schools, so we need the strongest performing teachers," said Julian Davenport, an assistant principal at Holmes Elementary, where three-fifths of the staff this year are Teach for America corps members or graduates of the program."

How can a brand new, with 5 weeks of training, TFAer EVER be considered a "strongest performing teacher"? TFAers HAVE NEVER TAUGHT, nor have they completed a rigorous teacher credentialing program which includes a lengthy student teaching internship under the supervision of a highly qualified, mentor teacher? Seriously, people, TFAers are highly UNqualified to teach - especially our most needy students. Do these possibly altruist TFAers ever consider the possibility that their lack of training and experience actually harms the students they 'teach'? (BTW - test prep is NOT teaching.) Oh, and the jury is IN.
12:17 AM on 11/29/2011
I would give you a standing ovation if I could. Content knowledge is important to teacher effectiveness but it is not the most important quality. A lot of knowledge about child development and brain development is missed when someone has not gone through a traditional teacher licensing program.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bobbrowntown
01:32 AM on 11/29/2011
not to mention classroom management. how many days are lost when TFAers, god love em, can't get kids to the cafeteria or to gym. I have an idea, how about we take the TFAers and have them replace the very best teachers in the district so those teachers can go make a real difference for these children.
04:53 AM on 11/29/2011
give me a friggen break...union members, who can barely tie their own shoes, are considering brain development.....THAT is the best line I have ever read on HuffPo....
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
05:45 PM on 11/28/2011
Considering your race is "Blank" of achievements causes children to set out to imitate others. This is kept up for a while, but like any effort at meaningless imitation, it results in failure.

The African American mind has been brought under the complete control of his historical oppressor via the educational system. African Americans are affraid (naturally) of anything that sounds like discrimnation due to the history of denial of opportunity. They are anxious to have everything the whites have, even if it is harmful.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DLee4144
05:39 PM on 11/28/2011
The reforms that are being put forward by most of the people who say anything about the subject involve teachers working 8 hour days- which means actually being totally there for eight hours, no coffee breaks, no potty breaks, no lapse of attention to the work, then going home and spending about 20/30 minutes for each of those hours grading the work and prepping for the next day. They recommend doing this for 11 months a year, for a salary that after 20-25 years and a master's degree, which you are required to get at your own expense and on your own time, will be about equal to that of an engineer who is one year out of a bachelor's program.

At the present time, 1/3 of those people who train as teachers for four years wash out before their fifth year of teaching. How many people will even be willing to train to be teachers if the job becomes even harder and less rewarding? And, why would anyone who could get a better job stay after they did? In the effort to improve teaching, I think the powers that be will make the job so difficult that no one with the ability to do the job will be willing to take it.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
05:36 PM on 11/28/2011
TFA is simply another racially exploitive tactic to ensure that white folks are favored and employed at all cost; a continual program since the turn of the century to demonstrate that African American children are not worthy of consideration in all subjects: langage, math, science, history, etc. This is the beginning of the problem with placing people in the classroom who have no understanding of these children's circumstances. School becomes the first prison; teaching propaganda, hearing anything positive about yourself for 12-13 years.

"When you control a man's thinking you do not have to worry about his actions. You do not have to tell him not to stand here or go yonder. He will find his "proper place" and will stay in it. You do not have to tell him to go to the back door. He will go without being told......­..........­....His education makes it necessary.­"; The Mis-Educat­ion of the Negro, Carter G. Woodson, 1933.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DLee4144
05:34 PM on 11/28/2011
I remember my first year at an inner city elementary school, after graduating with honors from a respected education program in a respected university in 1969. I stood in my demolished classroom a few years ago, and took a piece of my broken blackboard home with me to frame. I remember that the curriculum said I was supposed to teach diagramming sentences to sixth graders, so I wrote all over that blackboard, trying to accomplish that task. I had no clue what to do about the fact that of the 48 kids in the room, only two could actually read the sentence that was assigned.

I admire the commitment it takes to be involved in this program, but I wonder how well they are coping with their lack of actual knowledge of what it takes to teach. They probably can do all right at the high school level, where all you really need to do is to stay a chapter ahead of the kids. (I've taught all levels kindergarten through community college, as I know) but to really teach, like you have to at the primary level, I don't think an inexperienced, uneducated person, no matter how well intended is going to be able to do a good job.
08:48 PM on 11/28/2011
I've got a heck of a lot more admiration for the commitment of somebody who walks into that classroom trained, and makes what they expect to be a 30-year-or-more commitment. A 2-year resume-builder, to me, isn't worthy of that much admiration.
04:17 PM on 11/29/2011
First of all, becoming involved in the program doesn't require commitment at all. In fact, most TFA workers are overtly NOT committed. Do you really consider two years a commitment?

Second, I really hope we can expect more from high school teachers than that they stay one chapter ahead of their students!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Marx Twain
America's homespun Marxist
05:05 PM on 11/28/2011
"When we started this 20 years ago, the prevailing notion backed up by all the research was socio-economic circumstances determine educational outcomes," Kopp said in an interview with The Associated Press. "We've seen real evidence it does not have to be that way."

And this here is the bedtime story that the 1% tells the 99% to help them sleep at night. Income inequality doesn't matter, because education will help your kid be part of the 1%. Prosperity is just around the corner for you and yours, don't raise taxes on the rich because you're on the cusp of joining them.

The problem with this theory is that it has no basis in reality. The higher the rate of childhood poverty in a country, state, or district, the lower its test scores will be. This is virtually inescapable. Even those charter schools such as the Harlem School that do well with low income kids spend a lot of money helping their parents move out of poverty.

It won't be educational reform that will close the achievement gap, it will be social policy.
08:54 PM on 11/28/2011
It's not so much "to help them sleep at night." It's to keep them from busting into the 1%'s gated communities and "spreading the wealth" the old fashioned way.

We'll leave alone, for the moment, the question of whether it makes everything all right if you can just get onto the winning side of a rigged game.
OHteach
She who laughs, lasts
01:27 AM on 11/29/2011
You make excellent points Marx Twain and I completely agree that social policy is the key to closing the achievement gap. It's also the elephant in the room that many politicians refuse to see.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Marx Twain
America's homespun Marxist
04:27 PM on 11/28/2011
"I like the pressure," said third-grade teacher Daniel Guerrero. "It makes me want to stay up late and make sure everything is ready."

Let's see how you like this, year-after-year, while your class size grows and your pay stays the same. I'm assuming this teacher isn't a parent themselves, and having to deal with the issue of raising his own kids while surrogating for a bunch of parents unwilling to raise their own.

This is the kind of crap that makes over half the new teachers quit in their first or second year. The job is hard, the hours suck, the pay is lousy, and the accountability is beyond ridiculous.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cmr86
Reality. Progressively-based.
06:38 PM on 11/28/2011
The toy's nice when it's shiny and new.
12:10 AM on 11/30/2011
It still has its bright moments.
OHteach
She who laughs, lasts
01:37 AM on 11/29/2011
NCLB pretty much took all the fun out of teaching and replaced it with a big old stick. I do have a great deal of empathy for new teachers as it is exponentially harder to teach today, than it was when I was a new teacher. The thing is that for many years the rewards far out weighed the challenges. So I can remember that kind of enthusiasm. It's just a lot harder to sustain today, for all the reasons you mention.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Marx Twain
America's homespun Marxist
04:22 PM on 11/28/2011
Wow, only 7% of TFA grads stay in education after 5 years, and yet the TFA professor says "the jury is still out" on whether or not TFA is effective?

What jury is that, the OJ jury?

I guess he's hoping that the American public will follow Himmler's rule that "a lie, repeated often enough, and loudly enough, will become the truth."
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jp90
06:57 PM on 11/28/2011
Excellent. Well said.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:13 PM on 11/28/2011
What I can not understand is how does TFA get around the NCLB "highly qualified" teacher mandate? TFA teachers are not qualified at all, yet they are able to be placed with the most vunerable students. This is illegal, unethical, and immoral. Parents should file mal-practice lawsuits against school boards that allow this to happen, as with a doctor who has had no training and is allowed to operate on a patient.