Report Details Barriers Teachers Face, Hofmeister Says It Gives ‘Real insight’

education

Low morale, overcrowded classrooms, ever-changing reforms with unrealistic implementation expectations, decreased classroom autonomy and a lack of teacher representation in policy discussions were top concerns cited by Oklahoma public school teachers about their field, according to a report released today by education advocacy organization Stand for Children Oklahoma.

The report, “Oklahoma Teachers Matter: Listening Tour,” was based on a series of focus groups designed to identify barriers teachers face in the classroom, find possible solutions and discuss the impact of recent education reforms.

Superintendent of Public Instruction Joy Hofmeister made the following remarks on the Teachers Matter Listening Tour Report. Conducted by Stand for Children Oklahoma, the report details problems facing teachers across the state.

“The Teachers Matter Listening Tour Report provides real insight to the most significant problems faced by our teachers and, by extension, students. I urge legislators to read the report and consider its findings when developing education policy.

“In particular, it is illuminating to hear from teachers themselves about the devastating effect of overtesting. Teachers statewide said that excessive testing steals valuable instruction time and takes student focus away from actually learning the material. While teachers agree that some testing is important, they are concerned that standardized testing doesn’t measure student growth and instead promotes an ineffective ‘one size fits all’ approach to education.

“Possible fixes outlined in the report warrant consideration, but there are immediate and sensible measures that legislators can take now. I urge lawmakers to replace unnecessary, unhelpful end-of-instruction exams with a test such as the ACT. In doing so, we would use a test that has relevance beyond high school, saves millions of dollars and increases instruction time.

“At the very least, the Teachers Matter report is further evidence that the best education policy needs to factor input from teaching professionals who are in the classroom.”

“In recent years, Oklahoma lawmakers have enacted a steady stream of new education reforms,” said Amber England, Stand for Children Oklahoma executive director. “We wanted to better understand how these reforms have impacted Oklahoma teachers since they, as the front lines of our educational system, have been tasked with implementation. Our hope is this report gives a voice to state teachers and leads to greater understanding of the challenges they face, so that we can work together to address these issues.

“We currently have a critical teacher shortage of about 1,000 unfilled positions. As a result, more than 800 classes have been eliminated.  After talking with teachers, it is clear that low morale is a key factor to the growing shortage of teachers.  We feel the focus groups results are a means to better understand the problem of low morale and combatting teacher attrition,” said England.

Focus Group Findings

“When putting together the focus groups, we made a conscious effort to include a diverse group of teachers with a wide range of experiences,” said England.  “We heard from very experienced teachers and recent graduates, those from small rural schools and large urban districts, and those with high levels of community support and low parental involvement.  While our report is reflective of the many different experiences and opinions of Oklahoma teachers, several overarching themes emerged during our discussions.”

Common themes expressed by teachers included:

Low teacher morale – Oklahoma teachers feel underappreciated and over-scrutinized.  Morale has been damaged by having to conform to state and federal mandates while dealing with increasing class sizes, constantly changing standards, inadequate staffing and professional development and low parental involvement.  “Morale is so low that we’re on the brink of losing a lot of great teachers,” explained one teacher.

Teacher pay– Teachers stated they chose the profession out of a love and passion for teaching, not the promise of a large paycheck.  As one focus group participant put it, “I got into education not for the incomes, but for the outcomes.”  However, teachers overwhelmingly agreed that higher pay would have an immediate positive impact on morale and could help elevate the teaching profession as an honorable and respected career choice.

Teacher exclusion from policy making – Oklahoma teachers do not feel they have a voice in formulating education policy. Since many policies lack teacher input, implementation can be problematic.  “Everybody platforms on education with grand thoughts and ideas, but they haven’t been or spent any substantive time in the classroom,” commented one participant.  Teachers also expressed frustration at the one-size-fits-all approach to the current assessment structure.

Inflexible classroom environment – Teachers are frustrated that increasing federal and state mandates have resulted in decreased autonomy in the classroom and less flexibility to adapt teaching methods to best meet the needs of students, resulting in lowered morale and an emphasis on test scores over learning. “The whole focus is on testing and not learning…there’s no passion for learning.”

Unreasonable political expectations – Teachers stated that it was nearly impossible to teach effectively and meet the political expectations of constantly changing education reforms in the current inflexible classroom environment. One teacher explained it this way:  “Kids cannot learn effectively in an environment where the standards change so rapidly.  Children need continuity, designed by teachers for students, not politicians.”

Recommendations

“Stand for Children Oklahoma calls on leaders to tackle this issue head on by immediately convening a working group of teachers, education advocates, budget experts, policymakers, and concerned Oklahomans to study and release findings with an actionable roadmap that includes both long-term policy and funding solutions that will lead to greater student achievement and focus on accountability,” said England. The group should be tasked with addressing the following:

1. A comprehensive review of K-12 education funding, including detailed appropriation levels for common education from enactment of HB 1017 to the present.
2. A review of the state funding formula to determine if it is in need of reform to better serve students and drive more funding to classrooms.
3. A thorough analysis of the HB 1017 Fund to determine whether dedicated funding from 1017 was applied to common education or if it was diverted to fund other state government funding needs.
4. A forecast of teacher shortage numbers based on the attrition rate of current teachers and analysis of the number of students enrolled in teacher training programs at Oklahoma’s higher-learning institutions.

5. A review of the education reforms passed since 1990 and the level of funding attached for implementation of those reforms to determine whether the reforms are actually reaching classrooms and helping students.
6. An analysis of professional development methods and funding levels directed to help teachers implement education policy mandates in their classrooms.
7. An analysis of classroom size requirements enacted by HB 1017, particularly class size waivers for districts that meet their bond indebtedness levels.

Methodology

Stand for Children Oklahoma conducted a total of eight two-hour focus groups Feb. 9 -12 in Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Woodward and Ada.  More than 80 public school teachers who teach a variety of grade levels and subjects in urban, suburban and rural districts participated, with both union and non-union members were represented.  The focus groups were organized and conducted by market research firm ShapardResearch.

During the focus groups, teachers discussed a wide range of topics including job satisfaction, standards and assessment, professional development, teacher and administration evaluation, education funding, community support and teacher involvement in policy formation.

For more information, the full report can be found at http://stand.org/oklahoma/action/teachers-matter.

About Stand for Children Oklahoma

Stand for Children’s mission is to ensure that all children, regardless of their background, graduate from high school prepared for, and with access to, a college education. We make this happen by:

  • Educating and empowering parents, teachers, and community members to demand excellent schools;
  • Advocating for effective local, state, and national education policies and investments and ensuring that those policies and investments impact classrooms and students;
  • Electing courageous leaders who will stand up for these priorities.

We focus on strategic education reforms and investments that influence what matters most: teacher and principal effectiveness, school autonomy with strong accountability, high standards, smarter assessments, strong data systems, grade level reading strategies and intervention in poor performing schools.


Print pagePDF pageEmail page
  1. BePrincipled, 04 May, 2015

    Is Joy standing with Stand for Children? The OKGOP passed a Unanimous Resolution at the State Convention condemning Stand for Children for their work in only supporting Democrats, their fake petition signatures (including Barack Obama of OKC) trying to convince lawmakers to keep Common Core (see the news story on News 9) and more. After their dark money activities trying to defeat Republicans and their Ethics fines, there is no reason for any GOP to even talk to that group or trust what they say.

  2. castor, 04 May, 2015

    Absent from these recommendations were: rewarding the best teachers with more pay; getting rid of the bad teachers more easily; reducing the amount of administrative overhead; capping superintendent salaries; easing acquisition of certification. And I love that part that says “strong accountability.” How? I’m afraid they haven’t a clue.

*

Copyright © The McCarville Report