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Sanslines
02-27-2008, 05:51 AM
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Percentage of Male Teachers Hits 40-Year Low

By Tamar Snyder

When Dan Brown began teaching fourth grade at Public School 85 in the Bronx as an NYC Teaching Fellow, he quickly realized he was one of the few male teachers at the school. The gender discrepancy worked to his advantage, he said. "As a rookie, I was given my own classroom, in part because there weren't any male teachers for that grade."



But his role came with an added responsibility not many female teachers face. "Only two kids out of the 26 had parents who were married," he said. "Most of these kids had no father figure at home. To come to school and have that male authority figure who was treating them respectfully made a huge difference."



Brown spent the better part of the year trying to connect with his students and serve as a role model. "I had to be an agent of good with them," he said. "Many of them lead exceptionally difficult lives. They've been abandoned. I'm not claiming I was any kind of savior, but I went to great lengths to prove they could trust me."



Brown recently published "The Great Expectations School: A Rookie Year in the New Blackboard Jungle" (Arcade Publishing, 2007), in which he recounts what he terms a "brutal" year as a Teaching Fellow. He's currently teaching at DeWitt Clinton High School in the Bronx and studying for a master's degree at Columbia University's Teachers College.



Although gender doesn't matter in most regards, "some kids, especially boys, connect more with male teachers," Brown said. Many of his students had never had a male teacher before. "It made a difference that I was a man," he said. "It was just a different kind of classroom environment, a different vibe. Some female teachers are maternal toward their students; I wasn't. I expected a lot from them."



Wanted: A few good men
It's not just New York City's P.S. 85 that's experiencing a shortage of male teachers. Male teachers are in the minority across the country. And although this isn't a new phenomenon, it's getting worse.



According to statistics recently released by the National Education Association (NEA), men made up just 24.4 percent of the total number of teachers in 2006. In fact, the number of male public school teachers in the U.S. has hit a record 40-year low. Arkansas, at 17.5 percent, and Mississippi, with 17.7 percent, have the lowest percentage of male teachers, while Kansas, at 33.3 percent, and Oregon, with 31.4 percent, boast the largest percentage of men leading the classroom.

Why the downward trend in male teaching? According to Bryan Nelson, founder of MenTeach, a nonprofit organization dedicated to recruiting male teachers, research suggests three key reasons for the shortage of male teachers: low status and pay, the perception that teaching is "women's work," and the fear of accusation of child abuse.



Many men once in the profession say they quit because of worries that innocuous contact with students could be misconstrued, reports the NEA.

"There's a lack of support for male teachers, a lack of respect, and a lack of being able to be involved in decision-making," said Reg Weaver, president of the NEA. "And I can't say it's getting better."



Low salary levels have also proved to be a deterrent, especially for those men who value being the breadwinners of the family. The average U.S. public school teacher salary for 2005-2006 was $49,026, according to the NEA. "There's a long-entrenched idea that males are supposed to make lots of money and be a big-time breadwinner," Brown said. "But teaching won't make anyone rich."

Historically, a majority of teachers have been male; that began to change in the 1880s, when women pushed for their own education and the opportunity to teach. In the 1930s, after the stock market crashed, a big surge of men returned to education, as they did after World War II, said Nelson. "In tough economic times, men looking for work returned to education," since there were always teaching jobs available, he said.



Of the men who currently choose to pursue a career in education, many are promoted to administrative positions, often more quickly than their female colleagues, said Steve Peha, president of Teaching That Makes Sense, Inc., an education consulting company. "Even if men start out in the classroom, they often don't stay there for long," said Peha.

And then there are gender stereotypes to contend with. "Particularly in the younger grades, women are seen as nurturers," said Brown. "Men, not so much."



Recruiting men into the classroom
What can be done to stem the tide and attract male teachers? Increase recruitment efforts, for starters, say experts. "We've seen efforts to recruit minorities into teaching," said Peha, "and efforts to recruit adults looking for alternative careers, but we've never seen a coordinated effort to recruit men."

To be effective, recruiting must begin while men are still in school, he says. "We won't see more male teachers if we don't see more young men pursuing teaching degrees," Peha said.



Focusing on quality
The key to solving the gender gap in education is to focus on recruiting quality teachers, regardless of sex, said Nelson of MenTeach.

But once quality is assured, it's important to focus on bringing in more males at the head of the classroom. "Children are no dummies," Nelson said. "What message do they get when they see no men in schools? The message they get is that education is not important to males."

For men thinking of heading into education, Nelson offered hard-won advice: Be persistent. Get practical experience first. Look for resources to help you get through school, and, when applying for a job, make sure you have thick skin.



"People will ask you inappropriate questions," he said, recalling a recent e-mail he received from an aspiring male teacher who was asked during a job interview, "Why would any healthy male want to work with kids?"

In such situations, Nelson suggests stressing the positive aspects of having a man in the classroom. "When kids see [a man] in front of them on a daily basis, it helps to contradict negative stereotypes," Nelson said.

But turning the tide and recruiting more male teachers won't be simple, said Weaver. "Everyone's talking about how important this is. But I don't want to see rhetoric, I want to see action," he said.

luvnaturism
02-27-2008, 08:28 AM
This has been a long standing issue, though apparently it's gotten worse again recently. I still remember how surprised I was on my first day of Junior High School (sixth grade) when I discovered that I had a male teacher. Until then I didn't realize that men taught. The only man in my grade school was the custodian; the principle and all of the teachers were female.

Historically there were only two professions that were widely open for women: teaching and nursing. No doubt that has had a lot to do with the high proportion of women in teaching, and it probably still has its effects. Teaching is tough work these days, and it may be that there are more men who feel that they have other career options that are more attractive. It's too bad, because what the article said about the value of having a male role model for children who have no man in the family is true.

Sanslines
02-27-2008, 09:42 AM
The biggest problem with male teaching today is the absolute fear of being accused of any form of sexual behavior towards students. There is a huge social stigma against men (mainly single men but married men also suffer from this stigma) that men are child predators and can not be trusted. Men are guilty until they prove themselves innocent. Any student that might have a grudge against a teacher for any reason only has to accuse that male teacher of making sexual advances and the male teacher could easily have his career ruined by unfounded accusations alone. Men know this and so will tend to avoid teaching as a profession.

Skinview
02-27-2008, 12:01 PM
The biggest problem with male teaching today is the absolute fear of being accused of any form of sexual behavior towards students. There is a huge social stigma against men (mainly single men but married men also suffer from this stigma) that men are child predators and can not be trusted.
This was my first thought exactly. When my son was a toddler, we took him to day care so I could have time to get some schoolwork done. He had a lot of seperation anxiety, so I would stay with him at the daycare center until he felt at home there. The daycare center had a standing request for volunteers too. Then one day one of the employees told me that that they had recieved a complaint, from one of the other parents with a child there, that I was a "stalker". This country is in an absolute state of paranoia about pedophiles. I wouldn't dare teach elementary school.

Sanslines
02-27-2008, 12:29 PM
This was my first thought exactly. When my son was a toddler, we took him to day care so I could have time to get some schoolwork done. He had a lot of seperation anxiety, so I would stay with him at the daycare center until he felt at home there. The daycare center had a standing request for volunteers too. Then one day one of the employees told me that that they had recieved a complaint, from one of the other parents with a child there, that I was a "stalker". This country is in an absolute state of paranoia about pedophiles. I wouldn't dare teach elementary school.

In my area, on the local evening news, there are constant reminders of what the state is doing to "keep your children safe from predators". The media constantly bombards people with fear mongering that their children are never safe for there is always a male child predator lurking around each and every corner. The media seems to portray males as some kind of deviant sex driven monsters that do nothing but stalk and attack women and children. How sad that the situation has reached such proportions that males have to fear for their careers and life in today's world.

SpiderThug
02-27-2008, 02:32 PM
The biggest problem with male teaching today is the absolute fear of being accused of any form of sexual behavior towards students. There is a huge social stigma against men (mainly single men but married men also suffer from this stigma) that men are child predators and can not be trusted. Men are guilty until they prove themselves innocent. Any student that might have a grudge against a teacher for any reason only has to accuse that male teacher of making sexual advances and the male teacher could easily have his career ruined by unfounded accusations alone. Men know this and so will tend to avoid teaching as a profession.

It's not just in the teaching profession either. When I was in my first and only year in University studying for a degree to work with young families and children, I found that atleast 90% of those who when learnt what I was studying, all decided that as a male wanting to work with children, I had to be a paedophile. Even the woman doing this course saw men as child sex offenders.

This left me knowing that if I am ever faced with a false accusation, I would have no chance of ever proving my innocence. Even if the court would rule in my favour, society has already decided before I ever finished my first year of study.

I left.

Sanslines
02-27-2008, 03:18 PM
It's not just in the teaching profession either. When I was in my first and only year in University studying for a degree to work with young families and children, I found that atleast 90% of those who when learnt what I was studying, all decided that as a male wanting to work with children, I had to be a paedophile. Even the woman doing this course saw men as child sex offenders.

This left me knowing that if I am ever faced with a false accusation, I would have no chance of ever proving my innocence. Even if the court would rule in my favour, society has already decided before I ever finished my first year of study.

I left.

Yet with story after story like this, the experts wonder why males will chose to avoid certain professions.

Silverback
02-27-2008, 04:33 PM
I do not know why anyone would want to be a teacher now days. They get no respect, they can not control the kids, and if anything happens it is always the teacher fault. This goes for male or female.



There is something wrong here. I think maybe the lawyers might have something to do with this. :eek:

Croydon
02-27-2008, 04:59 PM
Boy, talk about a bunch of men who feel their masculinity has been bruised by the "cruel hard world against men." I think you guys are over reacting and over exaggerating.

Although, I am sure that the fear of being accused of sexual misconduct as possible reason for lack of male teachers, I doubt it is the biggest reason.

Teaching is one of those fields that is trending down, men and women. There just aren't many people pursing teaching to keep up with the need. For both men and women, the major issue is the pay and it is especially true for men. I have always believed that the reason we have a shortage of teachers in the U.S. is due to the low pay. In U.S., it now requires teachers to do more than just teach. Teachers today aren't just pressured to meet test standards but they have to deal with kids from broken homes, kids who are abused, kids with alcoholic/drug addicted parents, kids who can't read...there's so much stress that comes along with the job. Honestly, who wants to deal with that kind of stress AND get a crappy pay for it?

Reality is, the U.S. has VERY little respect for teachers. Every else in the world, teachers are respected. In western Euro, many countries seek out brightest students in their country and pay for them to attend college with the promise that they will become teachers. Parents too respect their children's teachers, something many Americans parents don't do.

Who can blame Americans for not wanting to be teachers? Not only is the pay horrible but you get treated like crap.

Sanslines
02-27-2008, 05:19 PM
Male teacher shortage bigger than pay


<!-- begin content -->Mon, 2008-02-04 00:00 | Posted by: Bryan G Nelson in Articles (http://www.menteach.org/news_type/articles) by Kendall Jones
Scott Schoenfeld is part of a dying breed. Mr. Schoenfeld, as his students call him, is one of few men who are teaching young children.
For some, low pay is reason enough to stay away from becoming a teacher, but men have another reason. Former and future elementary school teachers say there is a stigma over their profession, where men who want to work with children could be child predators.
Scott Waters, an elementary education professor at Emporia State University, said touch is a part of development, but teachers have to be careful.
"I think it's important for kids to have a hand on the shoulder or a pat on the back," he said, "but we live in a time where people are very sensitive to issues."http://www.menteach.org/files/images/teacher_0.jpg
The examples are all around us. Monday, former Topeka daycare director Timothy McHenry was found not guilty of indecent liberties with a child. He says he'd like to work with kids again, but worries it won't happen.
"It's an inherent risk of the job," McHenry said on Monday. "You can have 27 years of working with children incident free and then something like this comes up and it can devastate your career."
At E.S.U., the number of male teacher candidates is holding steady. The school offers a scholarship specifically for males who are going into elementary education. It also doesn't hurt that they were in the top five for teacher programs in the nation, according to Tes Mehring, Dean of the Teachers' College.
Schoenfeld himself is still a student at Emporia State University. Despite the stigma, he's focused on his career and the positive impact he can have on kids. He remembers an elementary school teacher named Mr. Clark who had a profound impact on him.
"I never had him as a teacher, but just having him in the building," he said. "Seeing him, having him say hello to me, just another man, a father figure, kept many children in the right direction."

Sanslines
02-27-2008, 05:25 PM
NBC Report on Male Teacher Shortage


Let's take a moment to fully indulge all of our biases and assumptions. Bear with me--I'm working towards something here. Pretend for a moment that your adult daughter (for those without adult daughters, we'll make her hypothetical) tells you that she has met someone new and that things are getting serious. You express interest and ask what he does for a living. She tells you that he is a full-time kindergarten teacher in the local public school system. Now be honest with yourself—what is your first reaction? Do you think, “How wonderful that she has found someone with a love for children and a passion for education.” Or do you think, “Well, that’s nice and all, but how on earth would he be able to support a family as a kindergarten teacher.” Or (and remember we’re being honest here) do you think, “Hmmm. Kindergarten? Isn’t that a little weird? Why would a man be interested in watching such little kids? I wonder if he’s just waiting to move up to secondary school or college or be a principal or something?” If you thought something like, “There must be something wrong with a man who wants to work with small children,” then you wouldn’t be alone in your beliefs, no matter how much I might object to your position. (And, for the record, I strenuously object to the cultural paranoia that labels men as potential abusers based on nothing more than their gender.)
And there we have a little insight into the male teacher shortage—which, not coincidentally, gets worse the younger the student. Good statistics can be hard to find, but estimates of the number of male teachers in preschool and kindergarten come in around 2-3%, and men make up only about 10% of elementary school teachers. NBC Nightly News even did a feature on the male teacher shortage last night, which you can watch on their website via the following link:
http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j//msnbc/Components/Video/071001/nn_shamlian_teachers_071001.vmodv4.jpg
Wanted: a few good men in the classroom (http://video.msn.com/video.aspx?mkt=en-US&brand=msnbc&vid=9eb3c8ae-97f7-4740-bb7a-b2b55682c0af)
The NBC report went over the shortage in general, as well as the most common explanations, namely salary issues and cultural biases. (Tragically, the teacher featured did mention his fear that giving a student a hug or any sign of physical affection or encouragement might be misinterpreted as some kind of harassment. How can we expect to draw men to a profession that requires them to live with the fear that one accusation could end their careers and ruin their lives?)
So why does it matter that there aren’t male teachers? Well, as the NBC report points out, the shortage deprives children of both genders of possible role models. From the perspective of one concerned with boys’ issues, that lack of male role models in everyday life can be especially harmful—particularly in areas where the existence of a successful and educated male role model could help counter other negative environmental influences. Not to mention that male teachers were once young themselves and can approach struggling boys with a little extra insight into how boys learn, what their needs are, and what it’s like to be a young boy.
With the male teacher shortage as severe (in younger grades) as it is, it’s not even a consideration of balancing the genders so much as working to encourage more men to enter teaching. As we consider how to do so, we certainly should look at the issue of teacher salaries and how to make early education more appealing to men, but we might also want to take a good, hard look at our cultural assumptions in the process.

Fitz1980
02-27-2008, 05:27 PM
Why the downward trend in male teaching? According to Bryan Nelson, founder of MenTeach, a nonprofit organization dedicated to recruiting male teachers, research suggests three key reasons for the shortage of male teachers: low status and pay, the perception that teaching is "women's work," and the fear of accusation of child abuse.



Many men once in the profession say they quit because of worries that innocuous contact with students could be misconstrued, reports the NEA.


That one I know about. Knew a guy who spent his time in college getting his teaching degree. After that he got a job teaching high school. After a year he quit. His biggest reason was that as an early 20s good looking guy in a position of authority he was constantly getting flirted with by female students. And not just some eye batting and stuff, girls who were literally throwing themselves at him. Bare (pun intended) in mind that many of these girls are 5'ish years younger than him. If he gives in to temptation he could do something that labels him as a sexual predator for the rest of his life. If he doesn't and, for example, refuses to bump a close grade for such a girl she could blackmail him (with something that never happened) and he could still end up labeled a sexual predator.

Sanslines
02-27-2008, 05:49 PM
Average salaries for teachers
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These states have the highest average salaries for public school teachers, based on 2004 data:

District of Columbia $58,456
California $57,876
Connecticut $57,737
Michigan $56,973
New Jersey $56,682
New York $56,200
Illinois $55,421
Massachusetts $54,679
Rhode Island $53,473
Pennsylvania $53,258
Alaska $52,424
Maryland $52,331
Delaware $50,595
Ohio $48,692
Oregon $48,330

These states have the lowest average salaries:

South Dakota $34,040
Mississippi $36,590
North Dakota $36,695
Oklahoma $37,879
Alabama $38,186
West Virginia $38,360
Montana $38,485
Louisiana $39,022
Missouri $39,067
Iowa $39,284

SOURCE: NATIONAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION

Note: Salaries include approx 3 months plus off for school holidays, vacations, and summer break.

luvnaturism
02-27-2008, 09:11 PM
Just for the record, it's not only males who are at risk of false accusations in the classroom. The overall climate is dangerous for women too. We know an outstanding woman teacher who failed a girl on a test. The girl started ugly rumors, her parents went on the attack, the principle caved, and the teacher wasn't rehired. It's ugly in the teaching business these days.