It grieves
me to read another story of a teacher who overstepped her boundaries, and
defying all reason did the unfathomable. Laura Elizabeth Whitehurst of Redlands
gave birth to a child on June 18th. The child is said to be fathered
by one of her students, who at the time was sixteen-years old.
The damage
inflicted by this woman will not be undone. If she is found guilty, she needs
to pay the legal consequences. But this post is not really about Whitehurst,
because she is just one of a string of teachers who have made really bad
choices. Instead, this post is about all of the other teachers.
Every day,
for nine months of the year, our children are taught by incredible, skilled,
educated, caring teachers. They live under constant scrutiny, and rarely
receive the appreciation they deserve. Test scores the students receive on
standardized tests are used for judging their success on any given year. There
is no appreciation that these teachers are doing the best they can with the
students they have been given.
They plan
all summer, when others think they are on vacation. They work though Christmas,
and Easter Breaks. They take work home, and are constantly assessing the work
that is turned in. They do all this
because they love what they do. They live for the “Aha” moments, when the light
turns on and a student “gets it”. I have been a part of education from the
inside, and I have watched it from the outside. These tireless workers deserve
our appreciation.
Here is a
thought for parents. Pay attention to what your students are doing with their
teachers. Praise the progress. Question the unusual. Be involved in your child’s
education. Visit the campus. Take some time off to attend the parent teacher
conferences. Volunteer to help in the classroom. In the years that I was in the
education, this almost never happened.
Prayer may
not be allowed in the classroom, but to date there is no law against it in your
home. Pray for the teachers. Bathe your kids in prayer as they go out the door.
Intercede for them all day long. Teach them the ways that they should go and
monitor their progress. Raising children is difficult. We need all the help we
can get.
I cannot
vouch for anything that happened in Redlands, CA, and I have no desire to pass
judgment on the boy’s family. The reality is that as long as people are
involved in any situation, something is bound to go wrong. However, if we are vigilant, and involved,
rewarding our teachers for a job well done, then issues like this are a lot
less likely to arise.
No comments:
Post a Comment