When I first started teaching, I was told about a maxim detailed in this article. Itâs about how the best part of teachingâthe part that mattersâhappens inside the classroom. The school politics, the bureaucracy, parents, all the more miserable parts related to teaching, happened on the outside. The trick is remembering the separation, they told me. Remember your job. Forget the noise.
Commonly uttered among teachers was this phrase: âJust shut your door and teach.â
Itâs a beautiful sentiment. Focus on the most beautiful part of our job. The learning that happens when your classroom runs on trust, kindness, and respect. The magic of seeing a student finally âget it.â The belly laughs and weird inside jokes. Protect that, and you can ignore all the nonsense outside.
Hereâs the problem âŠ
Teachers canât do that anymore.
Whether itâs done in the name of âparental rights,â justified by anxiety-fueled helicopter parenting, or driven by greed to cash in on yet another standardized test, the toxic garbage that was once outside is now contaminating what used to be a sacred space for so many of us. We used to be able to block out the political sludge, the corrupt school boards, and the manic parents, but we cannot âshut the doorâ once those things force their way in.
We cannot âshut the doorâ on directives to empty our library shelves.
We cannot âshut the doorâ on orders to act as a human shield for our students.
We cannot âshut the doorâ on a global pandemic that is still raging through our schools.
We cannot âshut the doorâ on students who are denied the support they need when budget cuts create large class sizes, appalling counselor-to-student ratios, and nowhere near enough professionals for emotional and behavioral support.
We cannot âshut the doorâ on parents who treat teachers as customer service reps who exist to satisfy their whims instead of providing a professional service.
We cannot âshut the doorâ on the lack of faith in schools as institutions.
We cannot âshut the doorâ on the paltry funding that exacerbates this lack of faith and misrepresents it as a teacher problem.
We cannot âshut the doorâ on a reality where we are entrusted with the most precious people in our countryâchildrenâyet also demonized as immoral overlords; where weâre asked to sacrifice our lives for students yet still have to beg every August for school supplies; where weâre heroes when we work ourselves to death and selfish ingrates if we ask for better.
If our leaders arenât going to set boundaries with parents and school boards, fund schools properly, raise teacher pay to create a more attractive profession, and make the other decisions necessary for prioritizing our educational system, let me be clear: We owe them nothing. For too long theyâve exploited our unpaid labor and kindness to fill in the gaps they intentionally leave.
I shut my own classroom door in May of last year. I miss the sacred space I spent over a decade creating, but not at the price it cost my family and me.
If you can no longer separate whatâs outside your classroom and the joy inside it, maybe you should too.
Maybe itâs time we all do.