xml:space="preserve">
Advertisement

More pay is not necessarily what teachers need

Kirwan commission chairman William E. "Brit" Kirwan, flanked by President of the Senate Michael Miller, left, and Speaker of the House Michael Busch, speaks at a press conference announcing plans for expanding education through the Kirwan commission plan in Annapolis. (Joshua McKerrow / Capital Gazett /)

Speaking from the experience of teaching in public schools and private schools, the Kirwan Commission is missing the mark in its recommendations for teachers (“Md. governor must engage with education commission if he hopes to influence it,” Oct. 31).

Teaching 30 or more second graders with little to no supplies in a room without adequate heat or air conditioning will not be easier or more desirable with a small pay increase and more paperwork and training obligations.

Advertisement

Teachers need small classes, under 20. They need less class time, paperwork and fewer meetings. Principals should schedule a third of a teacher’s time each day for planning or working one-on-one with students.

The physical environment of the school needs to be comfortable and well stocked. The North Avenue offices should not have better heat or more pencils than any elementary school in West Baltimore.

Advertisement

Teaching in Balitimore is an extremely difficult job that is not retaining its workforce. It’s not the pay. Our teachers and our kids deserve a lower stress environment. Why pay to bring in non-profits to reduce trauma when you could cut class size in half and reduce trauma and stress for students and teachers?

Megan Beller

Add your voice: Respond to this piece or other Sun content by submitting your own letter.

Advertisement
YOU'VE REACHED YOUR FREE ARTICLE LIMIT

Don't miss our 4th of July sale!
Save big on local news.

SALE ENDS SOON

Unlimited Digital Access

$1 FOR 12 WEEKS

No commitment, cancel anytime

See what's included

Access includes: