Angels
in Atlanta
by
Linda
Schrock Taylor
by Linda Schrock Taylor
I
spend my life in two vastly different worlds. The reality of that
is continually reinforced by positive feedback from readers and
fellow writers; by negative messages and threats from most levels
of government school administration.
The
government schools are too often unpleasant, discouraging places
for the truly dedicated, and the faint-of-heart. In my regulated
life I am unfairly evaluated; discounted for remediating and releasing
children from special education; attacked by unethical supervisors
and co-workers.
My
free market life teaching at my Learning Clinic; writing for LewRockwell.com;
participating at The Ludwig von
Mises Institute is positive, rewarding, and stimulating. In
this life I am continually comforted, supported and encouraged by:
letters from thousands of readers; postings on hundreds of websites;
newsletters that carry my columns to ever wider audiences; interviews
with radio hosts interested in my thoughts and opinions; feedback
from those who hear me speak.
I
have learned to distrust so many adults in the regulated side of
my life, but I have learned to place faith in the people who share
my free market life, most of whom are strangers I will never meet.
As government agents work to push me out of their schools
(the schools that no longer belong to the people of America), parents
and thoughtful citizens welcome me into their lives. These contacts
often touch my heart, but a recent meeting in the traffic lanes
of the Atlanta airport will be forever remembered.
Unlike
the school culture which I hold at arm's length I enjoy opportunities
to meet readers if I happen to travel near their homes. I have had
the pleasure of meeting and developing ongoing friendships with
readers in St. Louis, Denver, and Alabama. When Rita asked me to
stop along my route from Alabama to the Atlanta airport so that
I could meet her son, Alex, I readily agreed and we chose a meeting
place. Unfortunately, we forgot to figure in the time zone change.
Too late I realized that my drive from The Mises Institute to the
airport would take all the time I had available.
When
I did not show up at the restaurant, Rita called my cell phone to
say that they wanted to meet me, if only briefly, and would drive
the half-hour to the airport in order to do so. We arranged to meet
within the airport, but a hurried second call changed the location
to the curbside check-in area for departing Delta passengers. I
rushed back to Delta, and stepped to the curb just as I heard voices
calling "Mrs. Taylor! Mrs. Taylor!" as a vehicle rounded the curve
and stopped in the third lane of traffic.
We
had but minutes to speak. I stood by their car amid the confusion
of departing passengers and praised Alex for his success in homeschooling.
I referred to him as a "Liberty Boy" because of his love for real
American history. I walked beside the car as Rita drove from lane
to lane, letting other cars arrive and leave. Finally they were
forced to go, but before leaving they presented me with a beautifully
carved "Angel of Learning."
Our
meeting lasted maybe three special minutes but deeply touched
my heart. Such contacts are priceless and amply reward me for my
attempts to broaden educational choices, and raise educational standards,
for the children of America. Rita and Alex's acts of kindness were
the perfect ending to a trip that had already proven to be one of
the most wonderful of my life. I will never forget the day, and
will always cherish the lovely angel with a book in her hands. With
sadness I boarded my plane knowing I must return to the regulated
portion of my life.
Teaching
need not be so repressive, discouraging and disappointing. Administrators
need not be so infatuated with power that they lose sight of the
fact that children need real educations not progressive blather.
Government schools have been following the wrong path for too long,
and I have no reason to believe that those 'in charge' will ever
decide to drag the schools from the quagmire in which they have
become lost; from the briars in which they have become entangled;
from the quicksand in which they are rapidly sinking while pulling
the morals, the culture, the nation down with them. (Who is
behind the curtain pulling the levers, and has no one any control
over the thoughtless, inept, immoral person?)
My
rewards come to me person-to-person. My frustrations come from layers
of bureaucratic decision-makers. Teachers were once respected for
their intelligence and initiative in educating children to think
critically and live better lives. Now teachers are expected to serve
as slaves to poorly conceived agendas from the Departments of Education,
the National Science Foundation, the federal manipulators who believe
they have the right (never questioning if they have the expertise
and the experience) to write ineffective curriculum to be foisted/forced
upon local school districts. My frustrations come from observing
government authorities using money and pressure even deception
to force the purchasing and usage of anti-learning
materials prepared specifically to clone and mold school children
into the sheeple of the future; drones to tend the needs of the
elites.
I
would rather teach in a one-roomed school, with tattered classics
and few supplies. I would rather be gifted with an occasional apple
on my desk, than to earn a high salary at the expense of being expected
to suffer fools gladly fools who rule too-large schools, created
and ensnared by government regulations.
I
would rather earn the respect of the individuals in the community,
than receive sell-out evaluations from principals who only taught
the minimum number of years necessary to qualify for those fancy
administrative credentials. (Ah! Yet another good reason to do away
with certification!)
As
I have said before, and will say forever I AM a team player,
but like Bernie Goldberg, "I play for the OTHER team." Government
school officials should be held accountable and punished for mistreatment
of teachers who work hard to really educate children. Such
teachers spend their careers in misery cheated, tormented,
and demeaned by administrators driven by progressive agendas, rather
than by sincere desires to truly, actually, fully educate children.
Government school officials should be ashamed that dedicated, hardworking,
gifted teachers must look to children, parents and strangers for
angels and apples; to children, parents and strangers who see us
more clearly, and assess us more fairly and accurately, than those
who have been given the power, by reason of their State certifications,
to rule; to lord over; our classrooms, our lives, and the lives
of our students.
The
kinds of teachers being pressured to leave the government schools
are exactly the kinds of teachers that America needs. A vote of
confidence, on a person-to-person basis, would mean so much; would
lend emotional support; would help those teachers focus on the children
and ignore the system. Public support would provide skilled teachers
with courage to rise above the chaos as regulated schooling crumbles
and sinks beneath the shifting sands of agenda-driven Progressive
movements. Good riddance to the dying government schooling system.
Apples and angels to those teachers who are battling unbelievable
odds as they attempt to save the culture one child at a time.
April
10, 2004
Linda Schrock Taylor [send
her mail] lives in Michigan.
She is a free-lance writer and the owner of "The Learning Clinic,"
where real reading, and real math, are taught effectively and efficiently.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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Schrock Taylor Archives
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