A new School of Thought

March 18th, 2008

I usually ignore e-mails from strangers asking me to promote their blogs.

Today, though, I sidestep that unwritten rule. I received an e-mail last night from Fred Deutsch, a school councilperson in Watertown, regarding his blog, School of Thought.

It’s well written and unapologetic. Best of all, it champions technology and the importance of being a forward thinking, multi-platform educator. It points out the positives of blogging (see, Bob Costas?) and shows how it can be beneficial to a school district’s constituents.

Most of all, I reminds me of my past, of just a few years ago when issues of school importance weren’t just articles in the newspaper, but actual roadblocks in my career.

Allow me to get personal here. I was a teacher once, a failed venture that I probably don’t give myself enough credit for. I was once intimately knowledgeable of school issues; of the difficulty of implementing No Child Left Behind and the scary reality of declining budgets. I stood in front of 20 or more kids five times a day and attempted to make sense of the Krebs Cycle, DNA replication, basic physics and organic chemistry.

Often, I stood in front of 20 or more kids five times a day and handed out worksheets, pressed play on movies, read my book and played babysitter.

The average person changes his or her career five times. Counting my high school jobs, I’ve gone from retail to food service to maintenance (with several more stints of retail in between) to substitute teacher to call center manager to writer. That’s six. I’m due to stick with something for a while now, thanks.

But I’ll always remember teaching as my first grown-up job, my post-college, “You’re a big kid now” career. I had a title, an identity – Corey Vilhauer, Teacher. I commanded respect from parents based not on my abilities but on my position, seen as a professional, even if I was never quite paid like one.

I soured on the job pretty quickly, losing heart and all desire in a matter of months. Substitute teaching can tear you apart if you’re not made of the right stuff. I wasn’t. And while I respect educators more than any other profession, I understand that I was never able to earn that respect within myself.

In the meantime, I’ve found a local outlet to stay abreast of what’s going on in our state’s schools. With Sierra just four years away from public schooling, I’d better read up before it’s too late.

So yeah, that’s a really long, introspective and egotistical way of saying “check out School of Thought.”


Issues Considered: Blogging, Education, Politics

One Response to “A new School of Thought”

  1. Fred Deutsch says:

    Thanks for the kind words. You’re right of course, we’re complete strangers — I have no clues about what you look like or anything else of a personal nuture — though I recognize your last name (any family in Watertown?).

    I appreciate your review of my blog — as you noted it’s all about education — and it seems pretty unique from what I can tell. Lots of teachers all over the world blog, but I’ve only been able to find a handful of school board members.

    I’m a passionate education and child advocate. School-of-Thought is a place where I record the things that roll around in my head about education as I read, listen, talk and observe.

    As a school board member I participate in establishing policy. For me to do that job well depends on the honest input of both educators and parents. I particularly look forward to comments, suggestions and constructive criticism — anything that will help us create a better school and do a better job.

    That being said, please visit often. I appreciate thoughtful questions — especially the kind that make me search out answers or formulate ideas that I’ve not given much thought to in the past. I’m not an eduwonk – just a guy in South Dakota that care about kids and education.

    Fred

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