Sunday, December 2, 2012

Teachers, Students, Success, and Failure.

Student Success and Failure


One big reason I decided to start writing a blog was this article I read on the CBC News Website. Apparently a teacher in Edmonton was suspended and possibly will be fired for giving 0's on assignments for students who did no work. The other thing that prompted me to write about this is a web comic my friend posted on his Facebook page (thanks Jordan H!).

Hopefully I don't get in trouble for being opinionated, but as I have mentioned in my first blog post, I don't imagine many people will be reading this blog anyway. I am very much in favor of collaborative learning, student directed education, and promoting student success. I also strongly believe that every student is gifted in different areas. One student may be good at math, another may be good at science, and another language arts.

However, I also strongly believe that students (and humans in general) can develop the areas that they are not necessarily gifted in. Personally, I am not naturally gifted in math. Teaching grade 6 and 7 math has occasionally challenged me. At nearly 30 years old, I am now enjoying this challenge, where in Grade 6, I really disliked it. The point is, I am developing a skill I am not naturally good at.

It is important to encourage students, and help them know that they are good at something in life. I feel part of my job is to help students discover their gifts. The other part of my job is to try to stretch and challenge students to become stronger in both their gifts, and their weak areas.

This cartoon is rather preachy, so I will stop preaching myself, and let the cartoon do it for me:


Student Debt, and The Cost of Education

Student Debt:

I made another payment to the Canadian National Student Loan Service Center today. It's always sort of a depressing enterprise. I know that this is a first world problem. I should be thankful that I live in a free country, where I have plenty of access to food, clean water, housing,, education, and excellent health care. Please don't think that I am ungrateful for what I've been blessed with.

Ok, enough with the disclaimer. I am rather perturbed with the current system of post secondary education in our country at the moment. Unless your parents are rich, or you somehow are wealthy before going to university, what you will most likely need to do is to take out a student loan. By the way, if you are wealthy going in to university, what are you doing? Why not enjoy a life of ease instead of putting yourself into difficult situations like writing essays and exams? You don't need an education to get a job; you already are wealthy. Just be careful to not use up all your money. Or, maybe you are getting an education for the intrinsic reward of knowledge. That is admirable, but rare.

Anyway, back to the student debt. Maybe you had enough saved up from when you worked at a gas station during high school to pay for one semester of university, but after a year you need to borrow money to pay for school. Federal student loans are wonderful in that they are interest free while you are in school. This seems fair. This is how the process works:
  1. Borrow from government to pay for school.
  2. Attend university for a while, and do well enough in your courses to graduate. (note: It is probably best to NOT get a part time job while attending school full time if you want to do your best in your courses. It's called full time because it's meant to take up as much or more hours as a full time job)
  3. After graduation, get a job. Hopefully it is a well paying one, because by now you are probably about at least 20 thousand in debt to the government, and they start wanting their money back 6 months after graduation.
  4. Once you get a job, begin paying back your student loan. The current interest rate on the loan in BC is 5.5%, which in my case works out to $3.32 a day. 
Here's the really disappointing part though. If you made money at a job during this process, you must pay taxes on it. Sales tax, fuel tax, income tax, CPP, E.I., (I know CPP and EI are not taxes, but they are mandatory payments for services that I may never be able to utilize)

If you are a visual learner, this may be a better way to explain it. Sorry about the scribbles, apparently even teachers make mistakes. This is a fairly accurate, personal example of my student debt. I actually make slightly less than 40thousand, and I do not work for a public school, so I do not receive payment from the government. My diagram is actually worse; I don't get any payment from the government. In my diagram, all I received was the initial disbursement of student loans at step 1.



In summary:

You are passionate about something, or simply want a job.
You go to post secondary school to receive the qualifications to work at that job.
You borrow money from the government in order to get the education to get the qualifications to get the job.
You graduate, get the job, and begin being paid by the same government for your work.
You then begin paying both income taxes and interest on your loan.

In my opinion, this basically means you are paying the government to have the right to get a job. Once you get that job, you have to pay them income taxes as well. I know this is oversimplifying the matter a bit, but that is what it seems to me.

Friday, October 19, 2012

You know you're a teacher when...

You know you're a teacher when....

  • you feel naked when you are not wearing a watch.
  • you wake up your wife or husband in the night by telling them to open their textbooks to page 22.
  • you leave a pad of paper beside your bed to write down brilliant teaching ideas.
  • you fall asleep on the toilet and hit your head on the bathtub because you were up too late p
  • you have a shelf full of mugs

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

The Beginning.

Well, here I go. I am joining millions of other people in this online activity of "blogging". I've never really been a blog reader, which immediately makes me wonder how many people are blog writers and not blog readers. Perhaps the majority of the blogs created are only to give a voice to someone, but no one ever hears that voice because no one reads the blog.

I am a bit surprised I have come to this point of actually writing a blog. Normally I am so busy with life, that I wouldn't have time to write anything down. I am always wishing I would journal things going on in my life to look back and remember them, but for some reason I hardly ever get around to picking up a pen and writing something. I am much faster at typing than writing by hand, so hopefully this form of "journalling" will be less onerous. Hopefully this will also serve as a place for me to record thoughts about political and educational issues that I am interested in. I find I often come across an article or an idea that interests me, but I normally forget all about it.

My life is nearly always busy, and I don't anticipate taking much time to update this blog. However, at the moment I feel like a lot is going on in my life that I would like to write down; even if no one ever reads this but myself.

Here are some things that happened in the last year:
  • Got married to my wonderful wife Jordan
  • Graduated from VIU with a Bachelor of Education
  • Worked my 8th and final year as a treeplanter, having planted approximately half a million trees in my career
  • Worked a full year at Comox Valley Christian School teaching Grade 6 and Grade 8-12 photography
  • Started a side business doing photography and had my first art show and sold my first prints.