August 17, 2022
By: Trimmel Gomes
As Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis defends and expands
his call to have military veterans bypass the teacher certification process to
become educators, former educators say the move is a dangerous gamble despite
the current teacher shortage.
On Tuesday, DeSantis said he wants to expand
a new law allowing military veterans to become classroom
teachers without a bachelor's degree, including retired first responders such
as police, firefighters and EMTs.
Ulysses Floyd, a retied teacher and member of the Orange County Classroom
Teachers Association, said he taught classes when he served in the military and
later used his experience to become a certified teacher. He said he does not
like the proposed changes because the certification process ensures you know
what to do as an educator.
"You must be certified in the area in which you are teaching," Floyd
contended. "Just because you have a bachelor's and something else other
than teaching, so I think, in order for you to be able to teach, you must know
how, what you're doing, how to do it."
Describing college education as "overtaken by ideology," DeSantis
argued the certification requirement is too strict. The state's new recruitment
program will waive exam fees for the state teacher's certification exam for
retired military and first responders, but participants must have a bachelor's
degree.
Florida currently has a shortage of more than 6,000 teachers, according to the
Florida Education Association.
Vanessa Tillman, a retired teacher and board member of Florida Education Association,
said people may not realize one child brings at least six personalities. She
explained when you multiply it by 18 children for a single teacher to manage,
politicians overlook a lot of work.
"I do feel the political era is horrible as to politicians wanting to tell
teachers how to teach," Tillman asserted. "They want to legislate
everything and not understand we are there to educate the whole child."
Tillman emphasized there should be no room for what she called the
politicization of classrooms on issues such as Critical Race Theory, cutting
district funding, and the rise of politics in nonpartisan school board races.
DeSantis and Florida Department of Education Commissioner Manny Diaz also
rolled out a second proposal tailored to current classroom teachers: a
scholarship program to allow current teachers to get master's degrees to teach
dual enrollment classes.
Content for this Post is provided by Florida News
Connection, a Bureau of Public News Service.
Public News Service is a member of the The Trust Project.
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