Sunday, September 2, 2012

Out of the ATR

Last Thursday, as I was writing a post about the recent changes in the discipline code, I received a phone call.  It was the AP from my old school and I was being asked if I was interested in returning.  It appears that the final head count brought forth additional funds for teachers and that I was one moving up in line. I accepted the offer to return from the dead and was assured of my old computer lab as my room.  Thus, no longer am I "Excess'd -- A Teacher Without a Room". And I was just getting comfortable being an ATR. What with a blog that at least a few people seem to read, an animation character; Mr. Letgo who, it seems, has taken on a life of his own now that he has a Facebook page and a new attitude on my own part about my work as a teacher and of the current skirmishes on the educational battlefield. If nothing else, being a member of the Absent Teacher Reserve has evolved to being a member of the Angry Teacher Revolution. There is a fight against the privatization of education and the dismantling of the teachers union and it is being waged on every level and across the country.
You never know what might set you off in a particular direction.  When I was a jock at seventeen and laid up in a hospital bed from a football injury, I read my first book on my own: "Last Exit to Brooklyn"  by Hugh Selby Jr. and it changed my life. For me, being sent to the ATR pool has made me more engaged with the political realities surrounding me and my profession and made me want to add my own take in my own way.  I am clearly, not a policy wonk, but I am in a world where enacted policy has a direct effect and I intend to communicate that reality in my own personal way.  Now that my "situation" has changed my perspective has shifted.  My feet are no longer in the ATR;  I am in my classroom where I have my first obligation. 
We return to school on Tuesday and I know what an empty feeling that gives those who are still in the Reserve.  Their welfare and future must be an issue that stays alive despite the union's efforts to keep them silent and fragmented.  I am going to keep this blog going and advocating for our shared principles and goals under the current moniker.  I just will not be able to give first hand accounts of life of an ATR (and I had just signed a contract with Mr. Letgo for three more episodes) but I will continue to post as a teacher in the NYC system.  As far as Mr. Letgo's Facebook presence and his page for the ATR's - well, I will keep it going as a platform for ATR people but if no one is going for it then I am not going to keep it open, there is enough work to do already.  Well, I think I have a handle on all this...and now, I need to get ready for school.

9 comments:

  1. Congratulations and welcome back. It is not enough for our union to say to ATR's, "Well, at least you have a job." Teaching is a fruitful and dignified profession that should be vehemently supported and defended.

    Good for you.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I dis-agree. Teaching in 2012 is not a fruitful and dignified profession. Politicians, parents, students, administrators and even family members are jealous and hate the salary, pension and benefits we receive and want to bring us down

      Delete
  2. I wish I had my own 5 classes..and not being degraded to substitute duty. We chose this profession to teach.

    ReplyDelete
  3. You just got a little taste of what two thousand veteran teachers are going through. Count yourself lucky. Do not get complacent. If you settle for nothing now, you will settle for nothing later.
    Expect for them to mess with you again. Perhaps you should devote this blog to the plight of the the Always Totally Rejected.

    Bedouin Teacher

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree. Complacency is bad. Sadly, even if we get out of the ATR pool, who knows how long it will be?

      Delete
    2. Sometimes we forget that we are in a fight not only for ourselves and our professions but also in a fight for QUALITY Public education. This ATR scheme devised to discourage and demean veteran teachers is only one assault of many that will be used to highjack public education. Like I wrote, they are already here and we need to remember - that what you see being done to your colleague can be done to you. No one is safe - I have NO delusions, believe me. We need to keep our eyes on Chicago!

      Delete
    3. I will say that in my opinion, the uft will not throw us atrs to the wolves b/c if we go, then so goes our union dues(which is all they really care about) and bargaining power with the city. I honestly do not believe we will be placed into vacant positions until at the minimum a new mayor comes in and I do not believe the UFT will abandon us entirely.

      Delete
  4. Congratulations, that is great news. Do not give up the blogging though. Tell us how it goes.

    ReplyDelete