As An Educator, Are You Occupying or Being Preoccupied? [GOOD Magazine]

By Jose Vilson | October 12, 2011

As An Educator, Are You Occupying or Being Preoccupied? [GOOD Magazine]

By Jose Vilson | October 12, 2011
Image

Join 10.6K other subscribers

Stephen Lazar, Brian Ford, myself, and others at #OccupyWallStreet, NJTAG pre-Columbus Day Teach-In

Excerpt:

When we hear inaccurate statements about our profession, we ought to stand up and correct them—our battle is a fight against false ideas as well. As we elevate our profession by accurately discussing it, we should seek self-empowerment in the way we speak about our classrooms. Teachers can either continue to let others dictate the words we use to describe our profession or we can occupy the classroom, staying ahead of those who would rather downgrade our job to a matter of bubbles and letters. This will put us in control of the national education conversation and free us from inaccurate ideas about what the word “teacher” means. We should also reach for the validation of our students. We need to keep them occupied, too. Schooling needs to be less about busy work and more about the kind of learning that will keep kids engaged in the material.

For more, click here. Like it. Recommend it. Share it amongst friends. Thanks.

Jose, who thinks you should have something in common with Rosario Dawson


Support my work as I share stories, insights, and advice with research from a sociological perspective that will (hopefully) transform and inspire educational systems now and forever.