Tuesday, February 9, 2010

The Crash Course

The “Crash Course” was definitely a lot of information. It was sometimes overwhelming and a little confusing, but mostly it was pretty interesting. The news is always telling us of the economic crisis our country is facing. When Chris Martenson first made the comment that “the next twenty years will be nothing like the last twenty years” I didn’t really grasp what he meant. However as the movie went on it became clear that there is no way that we can go back to where we came from. Everything is changing at such a rapid rate that we have to rethink what we are doing and what we expect from the future.
As a teacher I feel that the economy affects our teaching because it affects our students. I teach in a small rural district and I know that they are feeling the pinch of the hard economy. My principal tells us at every faculty meeting to be aware of parents who are out of work. They are stressed and don’t always know how to deal with it. Then you also have the students who are coming to school and need to get away from the stress at home. Some come without having eaten, they don’t have clothes that fit and often are not clean when they come to school. This offers a whole new set of issues to deal with. I often feel like a mother to my students and to some of my parents. They need guidance and they often look to me for the answers. I know that is something that I was not taught in college!
I hate to think of the grim possibilities for the future, but would rather hope that we can see our way out of this mess and come up with a new way to deal with our economic crisis.

3 comments:

  1. I think you are correct to be concerned about your students. When I was young, my Dad was out of work a lot and it definitely affected our family.

    I am also concerned for our rural schools in NY because they are only getting through this school year because of federal stimulus funds. I don't think these will be coming in future years, I don't see a great hiring market for new teachers and, at the same time, I see a tremendous amount of pressure to do things like increase class size.

    The next 20 years are going to be a lot different and our rural areas are going to have to count on their schools as a source of stability (economic and social).

    KK

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  2. I agree! What is the future going to be like? I hope it is not going to be exactly like Chris is saying...

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  3. Many schools are already starting to make cuts to staff and program cuts because of the fiscal problems of NYS. I know many teachers who spend a lot of their own money to buy materials for their class because many families can't afford to buy supplies. What happens when the economy begins to hit teachers and they can no longer afford to buy necessary supplies?

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