Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was also a teacher who had to grade essays.
On the night my essays were due, and a few successive ones, I made that grading my priority. I took steps to lighten my load of completion grading so my time could be spent on the important stuff. I assigned shorter pieces (not term papers) so that the grading was manageable.
If you folks think grading written work isn't important, you are mistaken. People learn to write by writing and rewriting. Teachers need to be part of that.
At least when I got my MAT, we were taught the importance of high quality assessment and feedback to learning.
Yes, it is drudgery. But that is part of what you are paid to do.
Congrats, you’re arguing a point nobody was making. We didn’t say it isn’t something we have to do or that we don’t do it. Just that for some subjects it cannot be done quickly and done well or that other things aren’t more important. But go on with your ~MAT
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plenty of teachers phone it in. This is nothing new.
Plenty of people phone it in in most professions. Cause plenty of people are lazy and don't really care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wasn't also a teacher who had to grade essays.
On the night my essays were due, and a few successive ones, I made that grading my priority. I took steps to lighten my load of completion grading so my time could be spent on the important stuff. I assigned shorter pieces (not term papers) so that the grading was manageable.
If you folks think grading written work isn't important, you are mistaken. People learn to write by writing and rewriting. Teachers need to be part of that.
At least when I got my MAT, we were taught the importance of high quality assessment and feedback to learning.
Yes, it is drudgery. But that is part of what you are paid to do.
Hmmmmm
Anonymous wrote:Plenty of teachers phone it in. This is nothing new.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wasn't also a teacher who had to grade essays.
On the night my essays were due, and a few successive ones, I made that grading my priority. I took steps to lighten my load of completion grading so my time could be spent on the important stuff. I assigned shorter pieces (not term papers) so that the grading was manageable.
If you folks think grading written work isn't important, you are mistaken. People learn to write by writing and rewriting. Teachers need to be part of that.
At least when I got my MAT, we were taught the importance of high quality assessment and feedback to learning.
Yes, it is drudgery. But that is part of what you are paid to do.
Congrats, you’re arguing a point nobody was making. We didn’t say it isn’t something we have to do or that we don’t do it. Just that for some subjects it cannot be done quickly and done well or that other things aren’t more important. But go on with your ~MAT
Listen, I get it. I was never a HS teacher. But I was a teaching assistant (writing) in grad school. I had FAR LESS than a HS teacher has to do. But, I did have to provide high level and instructive grading and feedback to my students on a certain deadline. I only say this to make clear that I'm sympathetic to what you all have to do. I am. But, that is not where it ends.
The kids DO depend on and need those grades and that feedback in a timely manner if they are going to improve. Or if they get a bad grade and need to bring it up. They can't do those things without the benefit of the previous assignments being returned and graded. And they depend on those grades for colleges and other opportunities. And the parents depend on them to hold their kids accountable. That's hard for us and them when they don't have it and are supposed to have it. So, it's not just you and your struggles unfortunately. You are the "captain of the ship", if you will, and when you're not doing things in a timely manner it affects the rest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The USA has some of the worst teachers among wealthy nations, because of the way it portrays education, and the very low standards of every educational college. Don't be surprised, OP. The people who go in for teaching are unfortunately often bottom of the barrel graduates. Makes it really hard for the few excellent teachers to change perceptions about education!
Yes.
People say this country should be more like Finland. Well, Finland recruites teachers from the top 25% of high schools. The US? The bottom 50%. No wonder our education system is failing. Your child's teacher most likely was not a strong student her/him self.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The USA has some of the worst teachers among wealthy nations, because of the way it portrays education, and the very low standards of every educational college. Don't be surprised, OP. The people who go in for teaching are unfortunately often bottom of the barrel graduates. Makes it really hard for the few excellent teachers to change perceptions about education!
Yes.
People say this country should be more like Finland. Well, Finland recruites teachers from the top 25% of high schools. The US? The bottom 50%. No wonder our education system is failing. Your child's teacher most likely was not a strong student her/him self.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wasn't also a teacher who had to grade essays.
On the night my essays were due, and a few successive ones, I made that grading my priority. I took steps to lighten my load of completion grading so my time could be spent on the important stuff. I assigned shorter pieces (not term papers) so that the grading was manageable.
If you folks think grading written work isn't important, you are mistaken. People learn to write by writing and rewriting. Teachers need to be part of that.
At least when I got my MAT, we were taught the importance of high quality assessment and feedback to learning.
Yes, it is drudgery. But that is part of what you are paid to do.
Congrats, you’re arguing a point nobody was making. We didn’t say it isn’t something we have to do or that we don’t do it. Just that for some subjects it cannot be done quickly and done well or that other things aren’t more important. But go on with your ~MAT
Listen, I get it. I was never a HS teacher. But I was a teaching assistant (writing) in grad school. I had FAR LESS than a HS teacher has to do. But, I did have to provide high level and instructive grading and feedback to my students on a certain deadline. I only say this to make clear that I'm sympathetic to what you all have to do. I am. But, that is not where it ends.
The kids DO depend on and need those grades and that feedback in a timely manner if they are going to improve. Or if they get a bad grade and need to bring it up. They can't do those things without the benefit of the previous assignments being returned and graded. And they depend on those grades for colleges and other opportunities. And the parents depend on them to hold their kids accountable. That's hard for us and them when they don't have it and are supposed to have it. So, it's not just you and your struggles unfortunately. You are the "captain of the ship", if you will, and when you're not doing things in a timely manner it affects the rest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wasn't also a teacher who had to grade essays.
On the night my essays were due, and a few successive ones, I made that grading my priority. I took steps to lighten my load of completion grading so my time could be spent on the important stuff. I assigned shorter pieces (not term papers) so that the grading was manageable.
If you folks think grading written work isn't important, you are mistaken. People learn to write by writing and rewriting. Teachers need to be part of that.
At least when I got my MAT, we were taught the importance of high quality assessment and feedback to learning.
Yes, it is drudgery. But that is part of what you are paid to do.
Congrats, you’re arguing a point nobody was making. We didn’t say it isn’t something we have to do or that we don’t do it. Just that for some subjects it cannot be done quickly and done well or that other things aren’t more important. But go on with your ~MAT
Anonymous wrote:Well, essays were handed back today — a short exam day. Tomorrow is the last day of school but is 3 hour early release so not much of a day. DD did not do well on the essay and another year of missed opportunities to improve writing. I guess we need to look into and pay for some sort of summer class to improve her writing.
And the other teacher still hasn’t inputted the correct grades. Nothing left to do about it.
So disappointing.
Anonymous wrote:
The USA has some of the worst teachers among wealthy nations, because of the way it portrays education, and the very low standards of every educational college. Don't be surprised, OP. The people who go in for teaching are unfortunately often bottom of the barrel graduates. Makes it really hard for the few excellent teachers to change perceptions about education!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure many HS teachers are reading here. You might be better off contacting your school principal.
There are plenty of us on here. And 99% of us do our grading, promptly and accurately.
This isn't a plea to "HS teachers" it's to ONE problem teacher. This should be addressed with the administrator, not with this website of random people, who also could be teachers, but the vast majority of us DO our grading and feedback and such promptly.
Note that in a year where she had at minimum 8 teachers, there is ONE teacher you are pointing out. That is 12% OF HER YEAR. or 88% that did their jobs well.
Anonymous wrote:I wasn't also a teacher who had to grade essays.
On the night my essays were due, and a few successive ones, I made that grading my priority. I took steps to lighten my load of completion grading so my time could be spent on the important stuff. I assigned shorter pieces (not term papers) so that the grading was manageable.
If you folks think grading written work isn't important, you are mistaken. People learn to write by writing and rewriting. Teachers need to be part of that.
At least when I got my MAT, we were taught the importance of high quality assessment and feedback to learning.
Yes, it is drudgery. But that is part of what you are paid to do.