I just finished reading five essays from one of my war vet students: wonderful, descriptive, emotive writing about his own “up-close-and-personal” encounters with stupidity, the Bush doctrine, Obama facilitation and death in Fallujah.
Just another student — one 20-something Marine from Spokane who was ordered to shoot to kill.
His essay, describing how the unit he was in had to clean up the “mess” when his convoy accidentally hit an elderly woman carrying bread from a market, was gut-wrenching. “… [I]t was the first time I cried as a Marine … she reminded me of my mom back home.”
Yeah, PTSD, three-day nightmares with wide-open eyes, surreal visits to a VA Hospital where drugs are prescribed to erase memory, and then he gives me an essay on what to do after your three buddies in a four-man team are killed on Thanksgiving Day in Iraq.
His story has everything to do with my sticking it out as an underpaid community college instructor.
Superintendents, senators and business leaders have no clue when they cut a few billion here and another billion there from education budgets. These returning laid-off workers, chronically underpaid or misbegotten youth, and war vets need gutsy folks in City Hall, in Olympia and from the ranks of the business class to cover their backs, my back, our future’s back.
Working with some of the more disenfranchised, underserved, under-respected youth, adults, single parents and recovering humans is a kick, a challenge and an honor for me. Teaching college students ranging in age from 14 to 79 has been remarkable.
Most are just “regular” people with aspirations to succeed. Yeah, a lot are lugging around PTSD, ADHD, bipolar disorder and other learning-disability diagnoses.
But these are men and women sticking their necks out in my writing classes. The word “entitled” does not touch their lips. Moreover, I’ve worked with remarkable people who teach at community colleges and in the nuts-and-bolts four-year colleges.
Yet every year I’ve been teaching, the whole lot of us get screwed by inept, bumbling, retrograde administrators, politicians and DC lobby loyalists who have no idea what it means that the United States’ public education system — K-12, two- and four-year schools — is being run off the rails like a recalled Toyota.
The pink slips will be sent out in the coming weeks around dozens of states where governors are scrambling to cut budgets. The mess of capitalism, free marketeering, graft from inside deals and rotten American illogic (that posits education is full of fat-and-happy, inept teachers) has finally come home to roost as state after state guts education as we once knew it.
This sputtering oil-sucking, war-mongering, global warming-denying ship needs a new crew, a new design, and neither will be coming from some great entrepreneurial tree growing in the backyards of Bill Gates or Warren Buffet.
Education trumps everything, and those current headlines warning of huge teacher layoffs and tuition spikes in California will be repeated in every state, including those in the Pacific Northwest. California plans to fire 10 percent of the state’s K-12 teachers — after sacking 30,000 in 2009. And Spokane schools aren’t hiring new teachers.
The question is: Who gives a squat about a veteran of Fallujah who needs support services from a community college, support from the entire educational system that is being gutted? Tuition-raising blackmail and consolidating public universities, like Oregon is proposing, are absolutely insane moves.
Olympia needs to tax people and corporations reaping huge profits. Allowing tuition hikes of up to 14 percent a year is suicide. California did a 32 percent hike in one fell swoop of the legislative hand. That terminator state spends 11 percent of state coffers on prisons, 7.5 percent on higher education.
Anyone comprehend the calculus there?
Americans may not “get” peak oil, may not fathom climate change’s connection to polar ice melt and might not yet feel the real price of two failed wars. Many have not seen that ex-Marine’s intense stare and total disconnect.
But he’s in a second war now. Men and women like him took to the streets last week during a student walkout as part of National Day of Action to Defend Public Education. The message is clear — education is a right, not a privilege.
We owe it to laid-off workers, never-employed kids and that former Marine who has seen the military, the VA and the city fail him
Maybe my ex-leatherneck’s hope is penning essays in a community college — writing that gets to the bottom of his PTSD.
It’s his new war, and our old war — and tens of thousands of fired faculty and K-12 teachers are its casualties.

Having worked with students during my community college years it is a travesty how we hear the current administration, as well as administrations past, tell us how community colleges are the way to retrain workers, yet little to no stimulus money or any other economic revitalization proposal has included funding for community colleges.
The fact is Community Colleges are asked to do too much with not enough. Without a Community College system, where at-risk students can get the services they need to succeed in the classes that most four year universities require, these students would simply fall by the wayside. Instead of paying for the CC´s to help them gain the skills needed to have a well-paying job, we are paying for them to collect disability, welfare, or for their extended stay at the county jail. Either way, we will pay.
To not provide teachers with a living wage is deplorable. I want to teach. I am good at teaching. I am called to teach. I volunteer hundreds of hours a year to tutoring and teaching students of all ages. Yet I am not sure that I will be able to return to a CC setting to do that if something isn´t done. I am one of those single moms that Mr. Haeder referred to in his piece. While it took me 3 years to graduate, without my CC experience I would never be able to succeed with a near 4.0 GPA at the private university I transferred to. It is an incredibly fast paced program, and I thank all of my instructors for preparing me well. Yet with all that they imparted on me, I may not be able to do what I am meant to do simply because I will have loans to pay back. THAT is the true crime that is being committed against the students of all ages in this country; the best and the brightest that want to enter the profession can´t because of the lack of competitive pay.
The time for the praises of the teachers is over, the time to pay them what they are worth and then some is now.
Mar 19, 2010 | Reply to this comment
Mar 20, 2010 | Reply to this commentAs a concerned college student, daughter and friend of numerous inspirational teachers, and an advocate for education I would like to ask legislators- Is your priority to strive for a strong future nation? Without educated citizens our future will be bleak. Why cut education?
I am a nanny for an 8th grade school teacher who works with misbegotten youth. She teaches the kids who are too much of a distraction, due to ADD/ADHD, attitudes, or other interpersonal issues, to be in regular classroom settings. Not only does she teach them core classes, she tries to develop them in ways that the rough, hardened, brushed aside students miss at their dinner tables. School for many youth is vital exposure to people who care about them- teachers. Teachers are counselors, coaches, inspirational figures, and heroes. Without a doubt among the people who have made the most positive impact on me are teachers.
School is a place where students can be molded at young ages by their heroes. School is also a place that facilitates independent consciousness, rationalization, tolerance, understanding, personal growth, and strength. I have learned many things within my past four years at college which have made a more functional and socially active member of society. Education germinates true democracy. I am proud of my ability to see different perspectives and compare my situation to others around the world. I am proud to know that the United States has some amazing qualities that other countries do not. I am humbled to know that there are huge problems happening around the world today. My perspective of life has expanded, my satisfaction has been more fulfilled, and my passion for making a difference in this world has been sparked by vital education.
Tuition hikes and laid-off teachers are something that simply should not happen. The lack of respect and investment in our future is a crime that legislation is committing. California spends more money on prisons than higher education? I cannot help to think that some of the future prisoners in that state could be deferred onto a better path of self enlightenment and cultural awakening via education; if only lawmakers and leaders cared enough to stand up for the common youth and adults who are striving for a more fulfilled life. In the long run, if education is further weakened, will the money that once funded the expansions of conscious minds need to be put into more prisons, welfare, and law enforcement agencies? My educated guess is a distressed yes.
It’s truly depressing how little education seems to matter to our elected officials. The real kicker is how often they promise to do “something” about the education system, but they either never get around to it, or they make it worse. It still amazes me how the high school I attended was considered one of the best in Texas with some of the wealthiest students in attendance, yet they pooled all their resources into the sports program rather than hire decent teachers (nearly all the teachers at this school doubled as underpaid coaches) . Money needs to be spent efficiently and for the benefit of all, not just on the privileged minority, or on programs and wars that will only further drive us into economic and social devastation. We elect officials to represent us, the common folk. Folk who weren’t born with silver spoons in their mouths, whose lives often fork into a crossroad where they must chose a life of hardship as a civilian, struggling to pay off student loans while working at a dead-end minimum wage job, or as a traumatized, overworked soldier who suffers from guilt over the lives he may have been forced to end on the warfront. Something needs to change before America crumbles from the sheer stupidity of the uneducated masses, and the ill-informed, out-of-touch politicians.
Mar 20, 2010 | Reply to this comment
Haeder reiterated in his article, Gutting Classrooms, something that was mentioned in the news last night. The consensus rings true to what is happening across this nation towards the education system not being top priority as it should be. It amazes me that the super power that the U.S portrays to be is failing in all aspects of government and especially the students from K- 12 that are not meeting the benchmarks in education and community college students trying to better themselves for better opportunities. Educators have become less important in the eyes of the government but to someone that is returning to college to compete with new workforce emerging and the requirements that are needed in order to get hired, these educators are very important to these students. As for the military members having to deal with the emotional rollercoaster as they return from war, the government has grossly failed them and abandoned them because they will not have the education or help they will need to heal from their nightmares that control their life sometimes. The outlet for them is education and the resources the military need to offer to these soldiers. I could understand Haeder’s point of view in regards to the lack of value to the education system the instructor may feel because they are expected to work in conditions that do not create a learning environment for the student body. I know that as a future educator I hope not to feel overwhelmed, underpaid, and above all underappreciated for choosing to become a teacher to our future generations of government leaders. Hopefully they will appreciate the education that they rightfully deserve and will protect the value of the education system in their lifetime.
Mar 20, 2010 | Reply to this commentNot everything has to be profound to get your point across! Just being educated and letting people like the mayor, Lisa Brown, Cathy McMorris and the governor know how you feel from an educated prospective is enough it just makes people angry and then they shut off and stop listening when you use a profound way of trying to get your point across. We can’t stop everything "bad" from happening!
Megan
Mar 26, 2010 | Reply to this comment