[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 60 (Thursday, May 5, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2712-S2714]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING NATIONAL TEACHER APPRECIATION WEEK
Mr. BROWN of Ohio. I wish to talk about teachers. In my State, the
legislature just passed something called SB 5, and the Governor in Ohio
signed it. It was a direct assault in many ways on the teaching
profession.
The discussions I hear from conservative politicians and their allies
in the media--and they have many on editorial boards, especially in
central Ohio--and the lack of respect they show for people who choose
to teach as a profession is mind-boggling. We trust our children to
teachers, yet we attack them--or too many politicians attack them.
I am going to make it personal. I am going to start with my mom. My
mom was a high school English teacher born in Mansfield, GA, in 1920.
She taught in the era of segregation in Florida and Georgia. Raising my
two older brothers and me in Mansfield, OH--she met my dad coming back
from World War II, ending up in another Mansfield at the end of the
war--she taught in an era of a growing American middle class. Like
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teachers throughout our history, she taught her students and her sons
that education is a gateway to opportunity, that it can integrate a
segregated nation and create a prosperous nation.
At a time when our Nation needs our teachers the most, when our
economy needs our students to succeed, it is appropriate to remind
ourselves--in spite of this background noise I hear from so many
conservative politicians about teachers' unions and about teachers who
don't care, about teachers taking off in the summer and being done at 3
o'clock and all the kinds of attacks they like to make on teachers, I
think it is important to remind ourselves of the importance of our
teachers.
This week, our country recognizes National Teacher Appreciation Week
to give thanks and gratitude to teachers across our country to whom we
entrust our children and who have made a difference in our lives.
Let me share a few stories about great teachers in Ohio.
Linda Michael of Pomeroy, OH, in Meigs County, down on the Ohio
River, works with homeless students from K-12 to make sure they have
equal access to the same education as other students, from Head Start
to preschool to doctor referrals. She locates students in shelters,
motels, and homes of relatives to make sure they have what they need:
housing assistance, clothing, food, utilities, and mental health. Is
this a teacher who quits at 3 o'clock and doesn't work during the
summer? This is above and beyond the call of duty that most of us do in
our society. Imagine growing up homeless, going to school, not having
your own room, not having a room to share with your sibling, not having
a place to go at night. We need teachers to take care of them. We need
to do better as a society, but teachers are really a safety net for
these children.
Michelle Rzucidio-Rupright is an elementary school teacher in
Cleveland. For her, teaching is not a 9-to-5 job. It means going to
homeless shelters after school where her students live. It means buying
supplies out of her pocket for her students in the classroom. She is a
role model in the community.
I know Senator McCaskill talks to teachers a lot and hears these
things. How many teachers tell us they reach into their pockets? These
are not Wall Street bankers. They are making sometimes as little as
$35, $40, $45, $50,000 a year. Do we Senators reach into our pockets
and buy folders for our office or buy pens? Do Senators do that? Do
most businesspeople reach into their pockets to take care of these
children? So many teachers do, to buy construction paper--the ones who
teach grade school--to buy pens, to give kids money for lunch
sometimes. Clearly, teachers play a role most people in this country
don't play.
David Fawcett is a Columbus drama teacher. He has helped generations
of new immigrants and low-income students see something greater in
themselves--more than just a poor immigrant child trying to make it. He
encourages students to learn language and speech and culture through
lines of a play or a musical, through elocution lessons under his
guiding presence. He is another teacher who focuses on the individual
unique needs of a child who may have been born in another country and
may have parents who don't speak English. That child has different
challenges from what I had with educated, English-speaking parents in
Mansfield, OH, with lots of ideas and privileges. I was taught by my
parents to read before I started kindergarten because I was smarter
than other kids because I had parents who knew that mattered for me to
get ahead and for the advantages I had. Mr. Fawcett clearly focuses on
each child's individual, unique personality needs, situation, all that.
John Keller is a government teacher in Orange, a suburb 15 miles east
of Cleveland. Mr. Keller addresses the complexity of a subject with the
simplest of tools: a sense of humor. He engages students as soon as
they walk in the classroom, ensuring a passionate debate and empowering
students to always stand up and speak out about the world around them.
He makes them laugh. What better way to teach than engaging the
students, having a big personality and making people laugh, and
sometimes the teacher himself, I am sure, being the butt of the jokes,
the humor about himself.
Deb Lammers and Paul Lenz, teachers in Miller City in Putnam County,
OH--one of Ohio's smallest counties, southwest of Toledo--are the kinds
of math teachers every student deserves. They are patient and kind.
They adapt teaching skills to student needs, arriving early and staying
late. Again, all this stuff: Oh, teachers quit at 3'oclock; teachers
don't work in the summer. All of this kind of thing from conservatives.
Why they don't like teachers is beyond me, but why so many conservative
politicians attack teachers for all kinds of things, I don't even
pretend to understand. But Ms. Lammers and Mr. Lenz, teaching in Putnam
County OH, arrive early and stay late, being accessible to students
whenever they need help.
Delette Walker is a retired grade school teacher in Shaker Heights.
For decades, she helped children overcome the insecurity of shyness,
instilling in them the confidence to read out loud, to sing in a
musical to confront their fears. We know how young children--I have
four, my wife and I do. And when they were young--they are not so shy
now, but when they were young, they were fairly shy, and they had
teachers who helped bring them out of their shell sometimes. As
parents, we try to do that, with some success, but I have watched
teachers with my own children. I have watched them help them believe in
themselves, particularly young girls. I wanted to teach my daughters
that they could accomplish anything--anything--and the fact of their
gender, especially in that generation a few years ago, especially when
I was a kid--girls were treated differently, and girls were not
expected to achieve the way boys did or in too many cases the way boys
were expected to. I saw teachers, with my own daughters, help them
believe in themselves and in a big, important way. That is what Ms.
Walker did, now retired, but with grade school children she taught in
Shaker Heights.
Diane Skelley, Vicky Hilliard, and Pat Carson are high school
teachers in West Carrollton, OH, outside of Dayton. Through the written
word, chemistry equations, or musicals, they are teachers who encourage
students to try harder and reach higher, never to doubt one's talents.
I know a young woman in my office was taught by these three teachers,
and I know she believes she can--I know her parents too--take on the
world and grow and learn something that women maybe a generation or two
ago might not have been so successful at, and Diane Skelley, Vicky
Hilliard, and Pat Carson--all three of them at West Carrollton helped
her achieve that and helped countless others in Montgomery County in
southwest Ohio to move forward, whether it was in English, music, or
chemistry.
Vicki Speakman was a Grandview high school teacher. Grandview is
outside of Columbus. She was a Spanish teacher, a dedicated mother, a
bedrock of the community. She was diagnosed with cancer. Ms. Speakman
remained a constant presence at games and concerts, never missing a
chance to share a smile, tell a joke, reach out to a lonely student.
Ten years ago next month, she lost her fight with cancer, but, like all
great teachers, her memory lives in the countless students whose lives
are better because of her--not just her memory but the impact she had
on these students. Whether they think of Ms. Speakman every day or
every week, they live a life differently because of Ms. Speakman. That
is true with so many of these teachers.
When I think of this teacher--and I did not know Ms. Speakman, but
when I think of her presence at ball games and school plays and I think
of so many teachers I had at Mansfield Senior High School--my junior
high was one that will probably make the pages here today laugh. The
name of my junior high school was Johnny Appleseed Junior High School
in north central Ohio, where Johnny Appleseed, 200 years ago or so,
used to go around--it was a peculiar life he lived. He went around a
country that was totally forested planting apple trees. But to each his
own. He became a legend as a result. But I remember, in grade school
and junior high and high school, so many teachers who would come to our
plays. I played basketball in eighth grade and played baseball and
basketball in high school. I would see teachers--not just the coaches
but teachers--come to the games, the Friday
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night basketball games or the Tuesday afternoon baseball games or the
school plays on Saturday. They were part of the community, cheering on
their students, not showing favorites but caring particularly for
students who were a little more shy or a little less talented who might
need a bump up or encouragement from their teacher.
The same goes for Jackie Geary, who taught reading for nearly 45
years in Dayton. She was the matriarch of a family of educators. Her
husband Mike is a professor at the University of Dayton, one of our
great universities in Ohio. Her daughter Beth is a special needs
teacher for families of U.S. military personnel in the country of
Japan. Aside from her constant smile and laughter, she reminded all who
knew her that one of her great responsibilities was to read to a child
each and every night. Jackie passed away last month after a long battle
with cancer. Up until her very last days, she insisted on teaching the
most valuable lesson of all: compassion and love and commitment.
Again, these are teachers who go above and beyond the call of duty
not just to collect a paycheck, not to go home at 3 o'clock, not to be
off in the summer and not be a part of the community. Ms. Geary and Ms.
Speakman gave so much of their lives to their students. Both passed
away, Ms. Speakman some time ago, Ms. Geary more recently. Both will be
remembered, and their impact will be seen throughout.
Sandy Ryan is a special-ed preschool teacher in Cleveland. She first
taught special needs adults. She then went to college later in life to
earn a master's degree to teach special needs children. She buys her
students coats in the winter, supplies, including book bags, and coats
for children who can't afford them. Again, we don't pay teachers a lot.
They are barely in the middle class in terms of their income if they
are a single parent and on a teacher's salary. Yet they reach into
their pockets. This isn't just buying pencils and pens and occasional
lunch money; this is a teacher who buys coats in the winter sometimes
for her students because she teaches in a low-income area.
Ms. Donna Marie Shurr is a high school teacher in Oberlin. She
partners with local and international projects--water projects in the
community, to building homes in Jamaica, to schools in Pakistan and
Afghanistan. She inspires students to believe that education is
continuous and service is a lifelong pursuit that extends beyond the
classroom. She is a teacher who, by showing by example, teaching by
example, helps these students navigate the rest of their lives. They
have a commitment to service beyond the classroom, beyond their
workday, beyond their family, a commitment to service in the community,
and it doesn't stop at our borders. With Ms. Shurr from Oberlin, not
far from where I live, it is international also.
Ms. Dean Blase is an English teacher at Clark Montessori School in
Cincinnati. I visited Clark last year. It was a finalist for the
competition for President Obama to deliver its commencement speech,
losing out at the last minute to a school in Michigan. Teachers such as
Ms. Blase instill values of curiosity and wonder in their students from
diverse backgrounds, encouraging academic achievement and community
service.
Teachers are counselors, coaches, mentors. They serve as surrogate
parents. They are friends of students at the right time. They are
advisers, they are cheerleaders, they are partners, they are--fill in
the blank--that any of us can do because we have had good teachers in
our lives. They so often go the extra step. They drive talented pupils
to competitions and scholarship interviews. They are an essential part
of our communities.
Yet, in Ohio, SB 5 is an amazing thing. It basically takes away
rights from teachers, collective bargaining rights. I know teachers--
when they collectively bargain, they sit down at the school board and,
sure they negotiate for decent wages, health care, and a pension, but
they also negotiate for class size.
I was talking to a teacher at a roundtable at a church right off
Capital Square a couple of months ago, and she teaches in a Columbus
suburb. But she talked about in negotiations how they negotiate class
size because she knows, no matter what she is paid or no matter what
benefits she has, she wants to be a very good teacher. She cannot be as
good a teacher if there are too many students in the classroom because
she cannot give them the kind of individual attention she would want to
give them.
Yet the Governor, the legislature, because of this ideological
mission they are on, want to bust teachers unions, they want to,
apparently, downgrade the respect teachers have in the community. Maybe
they think they should become bankers or doctors or lawyers so they can
make more money. I do not know why they think that.
But what that means is--I am tired of hearing parents tell me and
young people tell me: My daughter or I or whoever was going to be a
teacher, and they were studying at Miami University or Ohio University
or Toledo or Hiram College, whatever, and they decided--when they hear
all these politicians, conservative, mostly Republican politicians, in
Ohio, Columbus, downgrading teachers and criticizing the profession of
teacher--they think: Why do I want to do that? I am not going to make a
lot of money. If I am not going to have any respect from the people who
run my State, why do I want to be a teacher--in spite of the fact they
did want to be a teacher.
I am also hearing from young teachers who are now in the classroom
waging these fights that it is not easy teaching kids who do not have
much advantage, it is not easy teaching kids who have discipline
problems, it is not easy teaching kids whose parents are not
particularly engaged for reasons of dysfunctional families or income or
all the reasons parents are not as involved as we would like them to
be. It is hard enough to do that without a bunch of Republican
conservative politicians criticizing the profession in saying: They
quit at 3 o'clock, they do not work in the summers, they are lazy,
whatever they say about them.
So I wished to talk about teachers who have affected my life. Most of
these teachers I have mentioned have taught people in my office. We
walked around the office and said: Tell me about some teachers. Almost
every one of these teachers is somebody who has helped to produce
stars, absolute stars, in my office. That is one reason I wanted to
share their stories, and I wanted to share their stories because I
think most of us who are fairminded--unless we are elected to
legislatures and rightwing politicians--most of us care about
education, most of us care about teachers, most of us appreciate what
teachers gave to us, most of us honor them and respect them.
But you are not honoring and respecting teachers, you are not
honoring and respecting perhaps the most important profession in this
country, when you take away their rights, when you downgrade them, when
you go after their unions in the name of some ideological mission you
are on. It is tragic, and I am sorry. I apologize for them and their
behavior to the teachers of Ohio and teachers around the country. It is
too important a profession to do that.
I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. WYDEN. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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