Not Volunteering is Illegal According to the Liberal Government

Apparently choosing not to do volunteer/ extra curricular work is illegal now according to the government.

I am not sure why they are choosing this course of action.

BC is turning more and more into a fascist state. The government is abusing its powers to control unionized workers and it’s all because we don’t fund their campaigns. Please don’t think that it is more complicated than that.

If teachers funded political campaigns like business’s, than there wouldn’t be a 40% cut in public education over the last 9 years and coincidentally private school has seen their funding increase 35% during the same time.

If there was a photo op, then maybe Christy Clark would change her mind. But I wouldn’t bet on that. After all she was the one who legislated teachers back to work in the early 2000′s and thus started the erosion of the public system at the hands of the Liberals.

Just saying is all…

Here is a blog from the Vancouver Sun.

A protest that has resulted in teachers withdrawing from all after-hours activities in B.C. public schools amounts to an illegal strike, the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association (BCPSEA) alleges.

On Wednesday, it filed an application to the B.C. Labour Relations Board (LRB) seeking an order that would end the B.C. Teachers’ Federation (BCTF) protest and require teachers to resume all such activities.

The crux of the issue appears to be the definition of extracurricular. The BCPSEA says it is not trying to force individual teachers to coach sports teams, for example, but does not accept the union’s broad definition of what constitutes voluntary activities.

“The BCTF has directed its members to withdraw a very broad range of duties that teachers typically perform as part of their teaching job, based upon the fact that those duties are typically performed either before or after the school bell rings,” the association says in a statement. Those activities include parent-teacher interviews, student tutorials, writing reports and talking to principals.

“The BCTF’s call for service withdrawal captures both duties that are clearly and expressly required of all teachers and duties that are performed by some teachers at those teachers’ option.

“In our view, the BCTF’s direction to its members to engage in a concerted refusal to perform these duties constitutes an illegal strike in violation of the Labour Relations Code and the Act,” the association states.

The application was filed one day after BCTF president Susan Lambert sent a letter to members appealing for solidarity as school events are being cancelled or re-scheduled.

“For this part of the Action Plan to be effective, and to ensure that it can be sustained until the end of June, we need to be united and strong around the province,” she wrote. “It takes extraordinary courage for members to make these decisions, and we must support them and each other through this Action Plan.”

She also said the union provided a cut-and-dried definition of extracurricular activities to ensure consistency around the province.

The union has also announced that it is going to B.C. Supreme Court to fight the appointment of Charles Jago as mediator in the contract feud. It had applied to the LRB to have him removed because of a perception of bias, but the board said it lacked jurisdiction. Given the length of time it takes for courts to rule, it’s safe to say Jago will have finished his work before a decision is rendered. He has a June 30 deadline to reach a deal or submit non-binding recommendations to government – and no one expects this to end well.

Jago once described his task as Mission Impossible and I doubt he’s changed his view.

The LRB has set a case management meeting for Friday; no word yet on when a hearing might occur.

Teaching In BC – The Real Story

Here is a great article outlining everything that has happened to the education system in BC since the Liberals have taken office.

Use this article to educate yourself!

I didnt write this article, but share the sentiments. It was excellently written by Cheryl Angst.

I try to keep my personal politics separate from my writing career, but I am a teacher, I am a Canadian, I have a right to have my voice heard, and I cannot stand by in silence. Right now, my government is pushing legislation through to silence my voice as an advocate for public education. In a last-ditch effort to make my voice heard, I wrote a letter to my member of the legislative assembly in the hope it will be read aloud during the debate of Bill 22, and will be entered into public record.

Dear Mr. Farnworth,
I am a constituent and one of the more than 40,000 teachers whose voices will be silenced by the passing of Bill 22. While disappointed—devastated would be more accurate—I am not surprised.

In 2001, I lost my constitutional right to engage in political protest as a means of achieving a fair contract. In 2002, I lost the right to have a say in how many students would be placed in my classroom. In 2002, I also lost the right to argue for support for students with special needs. In 2005, I was told the actual number of students in my class was irrelevant so long as the district average for class size at my grade level was 30 or fewer.

I stood and fought to protect the needs of children in my care every time.And every time, I lost.
The Supreme Court has ruled that those cuts were illegal. My fight to protect the learning conditions of the students I teach has been validated by the highest (and most impartial) body in the province. Yet, what is happening as a result of that ruling?
Nothing prior to July 1, 2013.
Why?

Because the current government needs to say they eliminated the budget deficit. It doesn’t matter how many students suffer in the meantime. It doesn’t matter how many classrooms are too crowded and have too few resources. It doesn’t matter how many students with special needs receive little or no extra help. What really matters is getting re-elected, and the government has determined that rectifying the injustice perpetrated in 2002 will cost too much money.

Flash back thirteen years:
When I started teaching, intermediate classes could not exceed thirty students and the limit for placing students with special needs in a classroom was firmly set at three. In addition, for every Ministry-funded student in the class, the cap was lowered by one, so if I had three special needs students in my class, my maximum class size was 27. At the time, it was acknowledged that these measures weren’t really sufficient to meet the needs of all students in a classroom, but would have to do given budgetary constraints and the impossibility of funding lower student-to-teacher ratios.

I accepted this. I felt my efforts to individualize instruction for all the students in my class was recognized and that my employers understood the challenges I faced in working with such a diverse group of learners within a very limited setting.

I felt valued. I felt as though my employer and I were working as a team to deliver the best possible learning experience for the students in our district.

I took lower wages during local bargaining in exchange for better learning conditions for my students. I took lower wages in exchange for better benefits for myself and my family – benefits I may never need, but am willing to take home a smaller pay cheque for, just in case I ever do. I earned less, and given that I didn’t access all the benefits I was entitled to, my employer saved money.

Flash forward to 2012:
Now, my employer has very little motivation to bargain, even over the few things still allowed to be decided at the local level, because the government has shown a willingness—nay, an enthusiasm—for legislating contracts as a means of solving problems.

I teach in a 44-year-old classroom that does not meet the minimum size requirements for a safe teaching space. My school is not earthquake safe. The ceiling tiles are falling down. The roof leaks. My blinds don’t open or close. I only have enough science textbooks for one third of my class. My school has thousands of carpenter ants nesting in the ceiling and they emerge every spring by the hundreds, writhing and falling onto the students packed into the rooms below. My school has HVAC issues. Every winter teachers have to close their classrooms and take up temporary shelter in the cafeteria and library because the furnace cannot warm certain areas of the building above 60 degrees Fahrenheit. Some days there aren’t enough classrooms with heat, and students have to wear coats, hats, and gloves to class.
I don’t teach in the remote north. I teach in Port Coquitlam.

When I walked into my classroom last year, I faced thirty students across their chipped and battered desks. Six were already formally identified as having special needs. Another eight should have been (and are now in the process of being identified), and five more simply could not handle the complexity or pace of the government-mandated curriculum for their grade. All in all, I had nineteen—NINETEEN!—students on various individualized education and behaviour plans.

Who in their right mind would argue that my class was a suitable learning environment?
Well, because the district average was at or below 30, with fewer than three funded kids per division, the government said it was fine.

Fine?

I didn’t teach last year, I performed triage.

Barrie Bennett, a well-respected professor working out of OISE (the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto) once compared teaching to organizing a children’s birthday party.
He asked all the parents in the room to recall the amount of work and planning that went into the last party they planned. He listed all the things that needed to be prepared ahead of time, things like a cake, presents, goodie bags, balloons, and games. He discussed the challenges of bringing ten or twelve children into a single home for a period of three hours and keeping them suitably entertained. He had everyone visualize the clean-up at the end of the event, and most importantly, had people reflect on how they felt—tired, exhausted, relieved it was over for another year—after the event.

Barrie, eyes twinkling, then asked us to imagine hosting a birthday party, not for ten children, but for thirty. And instead of entertaining the kids for three hours, we had to do it for six. He casually said, “And instead of goody bags, you have to give tests.” There’s no cake. No games, no prizes, no clowns, no balloons. Instead there are required learning outcomes, unit plans, lesson plans, photocopying, adaptations, modifications and mountains of paperwork. Some of the guests won’t want to be there. Some are not ready to be there, and a few will come with adults who will tell you you’re doing it all wrong.
He asked us to recall those feelings of exhaustion after hosting a party again. Then he told us we’d have to do it again the next day. And the one after that. We’d have to plan and host the equivalent of one hundred and eighty parties. And remember, these aren’t parties where the kids are excited to be there, where you can whip out a clown or chocolate fountain to appease the masses. These are parties where there are tests and assignments and bullies and insufficient resources.

Barrie was talking about a typical class where less than 10% of the population is categorized as having special needs.

Last year more than half my class either held or qualified for a Ministry designation.
According to the government, this was fine because my district average fell within their guidelines.
I will never forgive the person who looked at my class composition and approved it.
And what’s worse, I will never forgive myself for being a part of the injustice perpetrated on those students. I couldn’t help every child every day. Assuming all things are equal, there are enough minutes in the day for me to spend 5 minutes talking to each student – and that’s assuming I don’t actually deliver any lessons, or you know, teach.

All things are not equal though. So if one student takes six, seven, or ten minutes out of my day, that means I don’t get to even speak to one other. I had nineteen students who could not cope without significant support. I’m an experienced teacher, but even I haven’t mastered the ability to clone myself eighteen times over in order to provide the one-on-one assistance those students needed.
Guess what? They struggled. They acted out. They disrupted the learning environment of others. The class was set up so they would fail. I was set up to fail.

Never before have classroom conditions been so atrocious.

But, I was assured it was fine because “on average” the district met the government’s guidelines.
It breaks my heart to think of the other students – the eleven who could cope. Can you imagine spending an entire year with someone and have them speak to you maybe once a week? To watch as the student who strolls in late and cannot find his homework gets the teacher’s attention and you, who are there every day and always try your best, are basically invisible because you don’t have an urgent need?
Removing class size and composition from the collective agreement was criminal.

It needs to be redressed.

The government needs to repair the damage that has been done, not cripple the system even more by stripping contracts and imposing a legislated settlement that doesn’t come close to restoring what was taken away.

I am an advocate for my students. Let me do my job. Let me tell you what my working conditions are like. Let me tell you what I need to help our children become the best and the brightest in the country. Let me help you put their needs first.

I have been told by those who are not teachers that I ask for too much. That I should be happy with the “generous” wage increases the government has given me over the years. That I am over paid and under worked. That I should be thankful I get what I get because I’d never have it so good if I had a “real” job.

I have been called lazy.
Slack.
Selfish.
Incompetent.

Not by my students or their parents, but by the government, the media, and the general public. I have listened to this message over and over again for the past thirteen years. I have tried to remain positive, to tell myself I am making a difference, that what I do matters.

Does it?

I am no longer sure.

Actually, that’s not true. I know what I do matters. What I no longer believe is that anyone else cares.
Public education is not about an altruistic belief in learning for learning’s sake. It no longer exists because it is an essential component of maintaining and improving a democratic society. It is not about preparing our youth for the future.

It is about free childcare.

Firefighters are an essential service. Police officers. Paramedics. These are highly trained professionals who have to be available 24/7 because accidents, crimes, and illness don’t work nine to five.

Education is valuable.

Is every minute essential?

The government says it is. They argue that students will be harmed if they miss even a single day due to teachers walking off the job – that’s what essential service legislation boils down to.

Yet, even a former premier used to pull his children from classes for family vacations! How can it be illegal for me to protest my horrific working conditions in defence of my students, but it is absolutely fine for parents to take their kids out for days, weeks, sometimes even months at a time? If it is illegal for me to deprive students of their right to an education, then it should be illegal for parents to do so too.

To argue otherwise is to admit the essential service designation is a hypocritical piece of politicking designed for the purpose of weakening teacher’s ability to bargain for a fair contract – or that it’s a PR gesture to buy parental support because it’s painfully hard to find affordable child care in this province.

Speaking of child care, why doesn’t the government tell parents schools are actually open during a withdrawal of services? If parents cannot find suitable care for their children during a walkout, they can still drop their children off at school. The administrators have to report for work, and they’re not bound by any class size or composition rules – they could supervise the entire school population in the gymnasium if need be.

THE. SCHOOLS. ARE. OPEN.
YOUR CHILDREN CAN STILL BE SAFE.

If more parents were aware of this fact, no family would have to experience stress and financial hardship as a result of any job action, and teachers would still have a tool in their arsenal for bringing their employer to the table.

The current Minister of Education is arguing that the job action I have engaged in over the past six months is harming our students. I would argue it’s benefiting them. Instead of dealing with paperwork for the office, instead of being bombarded with administrivia, my entire day is focused on teaching my students.

The Minister has argued that the lack of report cards is harming students. He has argued that students have failed courses and will not graduate because teachers haven’t issued report cards. He has publicly stated parents have contacted him, telling him they had no idea what was going on in their child’s class because report cards weren’t issued.

I have several issues with this line of reasoning.

One, why aren’t parents contacting teachers during the semester and, are instead, contacting the Minister of Education after the fact? Really? That’s like driving your car for over a year without taking it in for maintenance then phoning the president of the car company when the mechanic tells you your brakes need changing.

Teachers only refused to write report cards, we didn’t stop communicating with parents. Did these parents ask to see their child’s graded assignments and tests during the semester? Did they not think it odd if the child either wouldn’t show them, or said they hadn’t had any tests?
Parents want to trust their children, but if a child says they’re doing well and then brings home a failing grade, how is that the teacher’s fault? The assignments were marked – that’s communication. Tests were graded – that’s communication. If a student hides the failing evidence from his/her parent, the teacher shouldn’t be to blame. Short of driving to every student’s home and hand-delivering the assignments, there’s only so much we can do if parents don’t reach out too.

If, as a parent, you feel you aren’t being adequately informed about your child’s progress, you have a right to contact the teacher and request a meeting to get the information you need. You can have a meeting in person, over the phone, or even via email. This applies at any point in the school year, regardless of whether or not teachers are engaging in job action.

Two, once the report card goes home, it’s too late. The student has already failed the course by this point. A report card is a summative document that summarizes what occurred during a semester or term. It is issued at the end of the course/term. Anyone who thinks a report card would have prevented a student from failing has their timelines mixed up.

Students are not failing because report cards aren’t going home. Students are failing because they haven’t done their homework. (Or it’s because the system is failing them, but I already covered that earlier.)
I think the lack of formal reporting has been incredibly beneficial. Parents who would never contact me in the past—or only swoop in after a report card was issued and demand to know why certain grades were assigned—are taking a more active interest in their children’s progress. The parents of students in my class are asking their children what they’re learning. They’re asking to see the planner (homework organizer), and they’re asking to see completed assignments and tests.

The parents of students in my class are becoming active partners in their child’s learning. This government purports to put families first. The sorts of discussions happening in the homes around the province as parents actively seek to understand what is going on in their child’s life is just the sort of thing the government should be encouraging, not legislating an end to.

Oh, and because I am not spending hours counting money, or making lists of locker numbers and combinations, or collecting vaccination forms, or handing out photo orders, or alphabetizing student information verification sheets, or counting the chairs in my room for inventory, I actually have time at the end of the day to do the most important thing of all: talk with parents about their children.

I am a teacher.
I have always put my students first.
I matter.
My students matter.

Please, I implore you, do not let the government demean me and the services I provide even further by passing Bill 22. There is another way. There always is.
Thank you for your time and attention to this matter.

Yours in Education,
Cheryl Angst.

B.C. to prepare back-to-work legislation for teachers: minister

Here is a real shocker! (dis)honourable minister George Abbott is drafting back to work legislation for the teachers. What a load this whole deal has been. The gov’t position was to not negotiate in good faith, sit and wait a good amount of time and then say that its impossible to reach a deal with the teachers. Now they will use the least democratic way to negotiate a deal, by making it law. Wow, good for you Abbott, I hope you feel good about what you are doing. I suppose you have have to get your name in the headlines somehow…but hey, even though you have never been a teacher, you know whats best right? And who the hell is Trevor Hughes anyways, guess he gets his 5 minutes of political fame now! And one final thought, notice how Christy Clarke is nowhere to be found? Thats because there is no photo op involved with this one. This situation would actually take some leadership, something she clearly doesnt have!

BC Education Minister to Modernize Education System

For my 200th post at Eatmorecords.com, I thought that I would write down some of my thoughts after reading Janet Steffenhagen’s article in the Vancouver Sun titled ‘B.C. announces plans to modernize education system’.

And I quote, “British Columbia is promising more choice for students, speedier assistance for those who struggle and policies that allow them to bring smartphones,tablets and other electronic devices into the classroom”.

I encouraged by Steffenhagen’s opening paragraph summary of (dis)honourable Minister of Education Abbott’s plans. It means that he is willing to give the education system more money to implement these lofty goals. That means that he willing to give school boards the money to create school wide wireless networks so that smart phones and tablets are useful. That means that means that he is going to give under privledge students said tablets and smartphones so that they have any equal chance to be success in this picture of the new education world.

Abbott does not want us to “lose students in Grade 9, 10 or 11 because somehow we don’t connect with them on what their real passions are.” That means that all of the support workers that have been laid off will be re-hired and that Abbott will give more money to the education system to hire specialist and resource teacheres to help identify those students that are being lost and “pushed down too few pathways without understanding their interests and talents”. That means Abbott will give money to re-open all the auto shops and wood shops that have been closed due to budget cuts. And most importantly he will be giving the education system money to help reduce the class size so that teachers will be able to have more one on one conversations will all the students in their classes.

Like all politicians, George Abbott is announcing plans to change the education system. He is doing his best to created headlines that make it seem like he and his ministry are doing their utmost best to be the leaders of change. Lets us not forget that one of their most revolutionary ideas, BCeSIS, has been a waste of millions of dollars, and that funding for the public education system is being reduced annually while private education funding is rising.

As with any opinion there are bias but I really question whether the people in charge of the Ministry of Education have the puclic students best interest at heart. I wonder the last time any of them were a classroom teacher (if they ever were!). I wonder if there are lobby or special interest groups promising people in the ministry perks if they help to implement ‘change’ (Don’t pretend that these kinds of things do not happen. It is no coincidence that the creator of BCeSIS sold the company right after the province fully adopted the program and the new owners said that there will be no updates or support for the system.)

George Abbott used to be a teacher. He taught at a college where it is a pay to learn system. Maybe that is his vision for the public education system. Maybe he wants those who can afford tablets and smartphones to have the choices and those who can not afford such luxuries to have their talents and interests determine for them. Becuase that is what happening to our public education system.

I welcome change. I welcome digitized learning. But at who’s expense? Is the goal virtual class rooms? If it’s not because if that is the case, we will have a generation of really computer and internet savvy students with too few social and behaviour skills. It’s already beginning to happen. Believe me, change has already started.

Here is a link to the original article.

Foo Fighters Rocks

Foo Fighters Rogers Arena October 25

I just got back from the Foo Fighters show at Rogers Arena and man oh man did it rock. They played for almost 3 hours and they played every song like it was going to be the last one of the show! It was amazing to see them put that much energy into the show and I thought that the crowd did a great job showing their love back. Dave Grohl is a certified rock star and knows how to work the crowd! They even covered Pink Floyd and Tom Petty. Loved the show and can not say enough great stuff about the Foo’s. Also check out their new album, its amazing and even better live.

Set List

Bridge Burning
Rope
The Pretender
My Hero
Learn to Fly
White Limo
Arlandria
Breakout
Cold Day in the Sun
Stacked Actors
Walk
Monkey Wrench
Let It Die
These Days
This is a Call
In the Flesh?
(Pink Floyd cover)
All My Life
Encore:
Wheels
(Dave Grohl solo acoustic)
Best of You
(Dave Grohl solo acoustic)
Times Like These
(Dave Grohl solo acoustic into full band)
Dear Rosemary
Breakdown
(Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers cover)
Everlong

Pearl Jam Vancouver Sept 25 2011

Well my love for Pearl Jam continued last night. Pearl Jam played at the Pacific Colosseum for the first time since 1998 and it seemed like an old school show. A lot of old songs were played and it was great for the real enthusiastic fans. My favorite part of the show was when Ed Ved was bashing on Seattle fans. Again!

Here is the setlist and a few photos that I took.

01. Elderly Woman Behind The Counter In A Small Town
02. Hail Hail
03. Save You
04. Animal
05. Got Some
06. Given To Fly
07. Pilate
08. Unthought Known
09. Garden
10. Evenflow
11. World Wide Suicide
12. Setting Forth
13. Corduory
14. Unemployable
15. Present Tense {“dedicated to Olivia and her mom”}
16. Wishlist
17. Glorified G
18. Lukin
19. Porch

ENCORE BREAK 1
20. Bee Girl
21. Just Breathe
22. Off He Goes
23. Mankind
24. State Of Love And Trust
25. Olé
{Ed asks for a show of hands of those from Seattle. He mentions some people in the front few rows that are just standing there and wishes he could give those seats to the folks in the back “losing their minds”. He takes note of sign that says ‘Zagreb Remembers’}
26. Alive

Encore Break 2
27. Chloe Dancer/Crown Of Thorns-(Mother Love Bone, A. Wood) {dedicated to Andy Wood and Mother Love Bone}
{After the song Ed brings Bruce Fairweather (of Green River and Mother Love Bone onstage. Then the band brings out George, their long time head technician, and sing happy birthday to him.}
28. Smile
29. Search And Destroy w/ Mark Arm & Steve Turner of Mudhoney-(Pop, Williamson)
30. Rockin’ In The Free World w/ Bruce Fairweather & Tim DeJulio-(Young)
31. Yellow Ledbetter
32. Little Wing-(Hendrix) {band plays the song not just a tag at the end of ‘Yellow Ledbetter’}

Pearl Jam - Ole