Today to get teacher certification you have to have taken
the Education major in college. No other
major need apply. If you have not
majored in Education you don’t know how to teach. Thus saith the Ed majors who run the teacher
certification process.
Trouble, they are wrong.
There is no magic knowledge in teaching.
Successful teaching calls for the teacher to establish a trusting
relationship with the student, in fact all the students in the class, and know
the subject they are teaching. The
education major does not teach this.
My college roommate
wanted to teach school so he took the education major. He told me it was the most useless and boring
stuff he had ever suffered thru. And my
roommate was a sharp guy, if there were anything worth learning in the
Education major he would have found it. Essentially
there is no real content in the education major, and they rehashed nothing,
over and over again. Junior and senior
year, education courses met twice a day.
I have had a lot of
teachers over the years. Mostly good,
many very good, a couple of dud’s (Miss Coyne and Mrs. Waters) but in general a
pretty good bunch. The absolute best
teachers I ever had were in the US Air Force.
These guys were just enlisted men, pulled right off the flight line and
set to teaching in the Field Training Detachment. They were extremely good; they knew their
subject matter backward and forward.
They maintained order in class rooms full if 18 and 19 year olds, the
prime age for making trouble. None of them had gone to college, let alone
taken the education major. My takeaway
from this experience is successful teachers know their stuff and develop rapport
with their students.
For US
education I would first abolish certification of teachers. Let the principal and the faculty at the
school look at resumes and interview candidates and hire the ones that seem
good. Allow them to lay off new teachers
that are not working out without doing a bunch of paperwork. Look for college majors in subjects that
they will be teaching, English, mathematics, US
history, French, Spanish, physics, chemistry, and not wasting time on the
Education major that has nothing to teach anyone.