Iowa Schools Facing Severe Problems

Nicholas Johnson

Iowa City Press-Citizen, "Opinion," June 20, 2000, p. 13A



NOTE: This column was cut by the editors for space. The material omitted from the newspaper-published version is indicated here [in brackets]. 

What was Gov. Tom Vilsack doing in Chicago with Rockwell Collins representatives?

Looking for lost Iowans. Trying to lure them back home.

It’s not that Iowa can’t train its workforce. We not only educate Iowans in all trades and professions, we also train students from all the surrounding states.

The problem? After we provide them a world-class education at rock bottom prices, they disappear for jobs elsewhere.

But I don’t mean to discuss the irrationality of providing higher education with “state” institutions in a global economy that renders even nations irrelevant.

No, our subject is the future availability of quality teachers for Iowa’s K-12 schools. Clearly that remains a proper concern for Iowans – historically, economically, and legally.

It turns out our problems are even more severe than those the governor confronted in Chicago.

The Iowa State Education Association wants to inform our state’s citizens of those problems and some solutions. The ISEA is the state organization of teachers. As with most professional associations, one of its purposes is to increase the pay of members.

But since teachers’ pay is central both to the problems we confront and their solution it’s a purpose we can all support.

And the ISEA’s vision goes well beyond money. It’s version of the “three R’s” includes “recruitment, retention and respect.”

[About 70 percent of Iowa’s teachers are women. But teaching is no longer the only option for the best and the brightest. Women make up half of our entering law school class. Careers in medicine and engineering are available. Careers that offer rewards and respect – not to mention pay – many women prefer to those of teaching.]

[Of the few who do major in education, one-half choose never to teach. Of the half who do, a half of them are gone within seven years.]
 
Iowa shares in the national problems. America needs 2.2 million new teachers by 2008. But Iowa’s dilemma is worse.

Couple the low pay with the often inferior physical facilities, shortages of supplies and equipment, restrictive rules, lack of opportunities for professional development, large class sizes, and abuse from parents and students. You begin to understand why the ISEA includes respect among the three Rs proposals for the program it calls “Achieving Quality Education in Iowa.”

Fortunately for us, our school district is better off than most. Of the state’s 375 school districts 258 have fewer than 1000 students each. They are really feeling the pinch. But we can’t escape their plight. The success of each Iowan depends on the success of all Iowans.

Will the success of this campaign require more of us than asking for increases in teachers’ pay?

Of course.

Public responsibility as well as public relations demands it.

[Can’t we better utilize our $100 million-plus investment in the Iowa Communications Network? Or our nation’s multi-billion-dollar investment in computers and Internet access for schools?]

But ultimately we reach the bottom line: Recruitment, retention and respect.

They all require more dollars – and your support.

Nicholas Johnson is an Iowa City School Board member. More information is available on his Web site, http://www.nicholasjohnson.org.