Dear We Are Teachers,
I moved to Florida from New England this year and, at an off-campus job fair, accepted a position with what seemed like a great middle school. But from the first day the school was open this summer for teachers to work in the building, I realized this school is infested with cockroaches. Dead ones in the hall, live ones scurrying out of boxes, roach poop all over surfaces. Not the baby German roaches but the big tree roaches. Iâm OK with most bugs, but these are terrifying to me! I asked my principal what could be done, and he said apart from the quarterly exterminator visit, his hands are tied. I donât want to make waves at my new school, but this seems like a health hazard!
âThis Bugs Me
Dear T.B.M.,
Iâm shuddering right along with you. Even having grown up on the Texas coast where tree roaches are super common, theyâre still distracting, gross, and move like jerky little antennaed goblins.
They could be a health hazard, but itâs hard to know for sure whether your school is infested with roaches just from your description. The one line that sets this apart from normal roach conditions to me is that you see roach poop on surfaces you and students would ostensibly be touching. Iâve never seen that happen even from entering a classroom that was empty for a whole summer.
My advice: Ask a fellow teacher how normal these conditions are. Maybe even ask an exterminator what size infestation that amount of roach poop would indicate. You can always file an anonymous OSHA complaint if itâs related to health and safety, but know that your principal can probably deduce it was you since you asked about the roaches. (Theyâre not allowed to retaliate because of an OSHA complaint, but just FYI.)
In the meantime, get some Combat bait stations. Theyâre the best. #notanad #justthetruth.
Dear We Are Teachers,
I have a 7th grade student who is the tough combination of disruptive and reading at a 1st grade level. Iâve left voicemails with his parents and emailed 10+ times and never once heard back. Iâve told my principal and counselor, both of whom have given me the equivalent of a shrug when Iâve told them what Iâm dealing with. Hereâs what blows my mind: This student has been in our district since kindergarten and has never once failed a class or been held back. I have no idea how he has been promoted beyond 3rd grade with his level of reading comprehension! Iâm frustrated but also very sad and donât know what to do since it seems Iâm the only one who cares that a practically illiterate child is being passed through the system. Do you have any advice?
âDefeated and Deflated
Dear D.A.D.,
I feel your frustration in my bones. I saw this so many times as a teacher, and it never stopped making me want to scream into the void. This kind of situation requires a delicate balance.
On one side of the issue, you do not want to continue to pass him through the system. Give accurate grades. Document misbehavior. Keep sending those emails homeâespecially notifications of failing gradesâand start ccâing your counselor and principal. Specify in each email that youâve also tried to call home, and list the numbers provided.
On the other side of the issue, donât let the system eat him up either. Simply failing him will not meet his very serious needs. Heâll be assigned summer school, not go, and be passed on to the next grade anyway.
First, give your school one last opportunity to support you. Email your principal and counselor and ask for their recommendations for who to contact from the district who can help you reach this studentâs parents and connect him with the help he needsâespecially since itâs dangerous for your school to not have a reliable way to contact this studentâs caretakers. Hopefully that will put a fire under them. And if it doesnât, you will have done your due diligence in moving up the chain of command.
If that doesnât work, go to your central administrationâwhoever is in charge of literacy, ideally elementary literacy, and send this email. You can also send it to the head of counseling for your district and any community support role positions.
âI have a 7th grader in my class who is reading at a 1st grade level and who has been in our school district since kindergarten. So far, [x] weeks into school, I have not been able to reach his parents by phone or email. His behavior is disruptive, which I attribute to being so far behind his peers.
This student is in desperate need of intervention that goes beyond my content expertise as a 4th-to-8th-grade Generalist and beyond what my school has been able to provide. Please advise as soon as possible on how I can get this student the help he needs, including family support.â
Iâm sorry we donât have a better system. But Iâm glad that youâre advocating for a student whoâs stuck.
Dear We Are Teachers,
I got a job at my dream high school but was put in a position to be the sort of âcatch-allâ teacher this year to reduce the course loads of other teachers. As a result, I have five completely different preps: Pre-AP Spanish I, Spanish II, Pre-AP Spanish II, Speech & Debate, and AP Spanish IV.
Needless to say, Iâm drowning. Iâm barely sleeping because Iâm up so late grading and prepping. I was told by my principal that all these teachers would share their curriculum with me, but only three of them haveâand theyâre bare-bones roadmaps at best, definitely not daily lesson plans.
My principal told me this role would be a lot of work in the interview, so I feel silly coming to him and complaining about how much work it is. But I canât make it to December like this. What would you do?
âDrowning in Preps
Dear D.I.P.,
Uh ⊠no offense, but what was your principal thinking? (Please do not actually ask your principal what he was thinking). Thatâs a wild course load for an experienced teacher. For a first-year teacher, thatâs basically a recipe for burnout.
Remember: You accepted this position under the condition that youâd receive the resources you need ⊠and you havenât. Itâs less about you not being able to hack it and more about you not having the support you were told youâd have.
Step 1: Ask the teachers one more time if they have more detailed lesson plans theyâd be willing to share with you. I doubt they do, because my guess is that the principal never told them, âHey, make sure you have lesson plans ready to go for this teacher.â But on the off chance he did, you need to give them one last chance before going to your principal.
Step 2: Talk to your principal. Say, âI love my job, and I want to be the best teacher I can. I remember in my interview you mentioned that these teachers would share their lesson plans and resources, but I think I need more detail than whatâs been provided. Would you be willing to let me take a day or two to meet with district curriculum specialists in Spanishâor maybe other Spanish teachers in the districtâso I can get my plans in place at least until the end of the semester?â
Youâre not complaining. Youâre showing initiative. And youâve proposed a solution. Hopefully, this will show your principal youâre worth keeping around next yearâprovided he significantly cuts down on your workload.
Do you have a burning question? Email us at askweareteachers@weareteachers.com.
Dear We Are Teachers,
This will be my fifth year teaching middle school. After five very rough and stressful years, Iâm trying to create a better work-life balance. Knowing that I tend to melt down around mid-October, I decided to schedule a trip to Mexico for me and my husband and asked for three days (a Wednesday through Friday) off work. When I asked permission from my principal to use my personal days, she said yes, but warned to not let parents or students know that I was going on vacation and to not post pictures on social media. When I asked why, she said, âSome parents donât think teachers should take vacations mid-year.â Do you think she was trying to discourage me? Is it OK to plan a mid-semester vacation? Iâm so annoyed!
âUn Poco Desanimada