As I lay in the hammock this past weekend at my in-laws’,
relaxing on a nice visit for the weekend, I realized the summer is almost over.
I couldn’t help but think about the big to-do list that I
have every summer - read this book, look at that website, research this
strategy, modify that lesson, and so on. Educators are always on - trying to
figure out the best ways we can improve our classrooms, manage a school, and
help students. Try as we might, we cannot fit all of our work into the normal 8:00-4:00,
five days a week that we are given at school. We know this and our friends and
family know this. That being said and knowing that we do our best every day, I
do have a bone to pick with YOU, Mr. Citizen (any random non-school employed
individual), about my least favorite phrase that we educators never fail to
hear. In order to air my grievance and help you understand, the following
letter is addressed to you.
Dear John Q. Public,
“Oh, you work at the school. It must be nice to have
weekends and summers off!” Oh, how we
love to hate that phrase. On behalf of teachers, administrators, food
service workers, counselors, custodians, maintenance workers, transportation
drivers, HR personnel, district office staff, and anyone everywhere who works
at a school, I would like to take a moment to politely request that you all
stop using those words. Frankly, they are insulting and we are really quite
tired of hearing them.
As educators (this includes everyone on that list above), we
are hard at work every day of the week (yes,
weekends, too) throughout the school year, and we do actually work during
the summer months as well. We dedicate ourselves to educating your children,
grandchildren, nieces, nephews, neighbors and friends’ kids in a safe, happy,
and clean environment with the intent of helping them to become successful. To
illustrate this point, below are just a few of the MANY things that educators use their summer months to accomplish,
as told through their eyes **:
I am the teacher who finally has a chance to read those new professional
books that I have been looking forward to but haven’t had the time because I
also coach three sports and am in charge of the school plays.
I am the educator who has the chance to attend a long
weekend of professional classes on new ways to educate your child. The school
year doesn’t allow much time for this. Oh, by the way, this is all done on my
own dime.
I am the teacher that takes part of my summer to lead a
group of students on a trip that they will remember for the rest of their
lives. In the past I have taken them to Washington D.C., Gettysburg, New York,
Italy, Japan, Germany and England. The students will forever be grateful for
these opportunities and for that I am happy.
I am the teacher-coach that oversees voluntary summer gym
hours to help student athletes achieve at their best. I also take these young
men and women to camps and clinics in order to help them hone their skills. I
care about winning but I am most excited when I see my athletes perform at
their best in every contest, improve and learn valuable team-building and
leadership skills. That takes much prep and practice.
I am the teacher that spends countless summer hours
re-tooling curriculum and lessons to better suit the changing needs of my
students for this upcoming year. I do this every summer.
I am the brand-new teacher who is spending my summer
planning my curriculum, new rules for the first day and fighting nerves, hoping
that I will be able to help my new students learn. By the way – I won’t receive
my first paycheck until the end of September.
I am the building principal who spends my summer planning
for next year, reading new state laws and BOE policies, adjusting the schedule
as needed, meeting with and helping to train new teachers, and figuring out how
to build positive relationships with parents and the community.
I am the art teacher who spends my summer drawing, painting,
sketching and creating models so that my students can have examples for what
their work should strive to be. Art is beautiful and it takes a creative eye to
help build confident student artists.
I am the language arts teacher (with a Master’s degree in
reading, no less) that spends my summer reading young adult literature so that
I can find books to use that my students will like and ways to help me engage
them in the art of becoming an open-minded, literate person.
I am the athletic director who is busy scheduling and
re-scheduling next year’s games and contests for all of the sports in my middle
school and high school. I am also in charge of scheduling all other activities
as well. I get one period per day to do this (which is never enough). My phone
is on 24-7, and I check my
e-mail religiously ALL YEAR LONG.
I am the elementary teacher whose entire month of June
consisted of reading children’s poetry in an attempt to better comprehend how
to help my students understand poetry.
I am the superintendent who has spent many days calling our
insurance provider and many nights awake trying to figure out how to deal a
school building that has a collapsed roof and who hopes that it can get be
fixed before the school year begins. I am also the secondary principal and
transportation director.
I am the teacher who dedicates weeks to teaching summer
school to help our struggling students learn to read, write and understand
their basic math skills.
I am the maintenance staff member who volunteered to drive
to another town to pick up used lockers to install in our school. Our lockers
did not fit the current needs of our students. Also, I did this on a Sunday
afternoon.
I am the custodian that cleans and repairs the buildings,
oftentimes working far past when I should because I believe in a safe and clean
learning environment. I am also the one who meets the guy from the security
company to let him in the building to install new alarms. I do this on my
Saturdays because I believe in a safe school.
I am the food service director that spends my summer
planning next year’s menus, ordering high-quality, healthy food (that’s right –
fruits and vegetables) and tries to balance an (often very thin) budget to feed
kids on. I also coordinate a summer meal program for some of our students. I
know that this is important because that will be the only one or two meals a
day that some students eat.
I am the educator who makes a point to visit the local
county fair every year to see my students’ projects. My wife and I do not have children of our own. I do
this because these things are important to the students and I know that
creating a positive relationship with them is the first step toward their
success in school.
I am the teacher who spent half of his summer stumping for
education by promoting the ballot Initiative for Colorado education funding (
read more here). I believe in this because it is
the right time to make the right investment.
Educators work hard, on the clock and off, weekends and
summers all year long. We are compensated for the things we should do and the
things that also know we MUST do. Although
we may NOT be most overworked people
in the world, we are dedicated to your students and to our schools. Their
success means everything. We care for our students, support their learning and
only want what is best for them. This is a full-time job but one that we take
very seriously. This often means time away from our own friends and family,
working on our own vacations (yes, some
of us buy books for our classroom or take pictures of old volcanoes while on
vacation) or ignoring those to-do lists at our own homes.

Summertime offers us the chance to catch up on our to-do
lists, see our friends and family and even put our feet up in the hammock.
While we don’t all have to work in
the summer, we do. And we are glad for the difference it makes. Please remember
that it takes many wonderful, devoted, talented, and special people to make our
schools and your students successful. But again, I also ask you to please
refrain from using that ridiculous phrase. Because even though we may not be in
our classrooms or office, we are working. We work hard because we care and
because it makes the difference.
Thank you kindly.
Sincerely,
Educators Everywhere
** The above “stories”
do not necessarily represent one individual. These experiences are based on
real-people – friends and colleagues that I have had the pleasure of working
with or meeting.