Students opting to receive a teaching credential as part of their undergraduate degree live a double life — that of a student and teacher.
Pepperdine’s Teacher Preparation Program, or “Pep Step,” provides the coursework and clinical experiences necessary to qualify students for a Preliminary Multiple Subject Teaching Credential if they want to teach in elementary schools or a Single Subject Teaching Credential if they want to teach at the middle or high school level. Aside from learning skills like time management and how to work with diverse students in different school environments, students are having to deal with the uncertainty that comes with becoming a teacher. Yet, the Pep Step program works to show student teachers how important the job of a teacher really is.
“The students that we tend to have are super motivated because they want to be teachers and they’re so excited so the kind of qualities we see [in student teachers] is they’re not learning to be teachers as a fallback job,” said Education Professor Carrie Birmingham.
When Tatum Shackelford, a junior English and education major, switched her major from pre-law to English and education, her parents were supportive of the move, while others close to her were not.
“I have other family members that are like, ‘What are you doing?’” Shackelford said. “I feel like there's an assumption that there’s those who can do and those who can't teach, and so teachers are like the people who didn't have any other better options. And so that's really frustrating because in a perfect world, teachers are the most qualified and the most educated. There's just a prevailing stigma that teachers are incapable of doing anything else.”
Hannah Coughlin, a senior liberal arts major working on a multiple subject teaching credential, said that she struggled with the idea of sitting in a classroom for six hours a day while growing up.
“Everything seemed almost too routine, lacking innovation and opportunity for play and curiosity,” Coughlin said. “I remember telling my mom, also a fellow teacher, ‘I would love to work with kids and be a teacher, but I just don't think I could step in to a classroom again, I don't like the way education looks.’ She listened lovingly and decided to challenge me by replying, ‘Then change it.’”
Students gain firsthand experience working with children of various grade levels in incremental steps. The first semester requires students to teach in a classroom for 20 hours, 50 hours the next semester, and part-time teaching for 160 hours followed by full-time teaching during senior year. While the teacher preparation program is relatively small, with about 40 students total, according to Birmingham, these students are diligently working through the requirements.
“They always have concerns at the beginning and they can’t imagine how it can be done,” Birmingham said. “But it’s incremental so just about everyone manages it just fine.”
Though the teacher education program is 34 units on top of a student’s major, more than half finish their bachelor’s degree and teaching credential in four years and the rest receive their credential after finishing the semester of full-time student teaching, Birmingham said.
In addition, teacher candidates have a culminating assessment called the edTPA.
“We basically have to prove in 50-ish pages that we are competent teachers,” said Caitlin Menez, a senior liberal arts major working toward a multiple subject credential. “It consists of creating a three lesson unit, filming your lessons, analyzing your teaching as well as student work, and writing as much as you possibly can about it.”
Despite the amount of steps required to become a teacher, salaries are often low — $54,720 is the average salary for those working in the Los Angeles Unified School District, according to Indeed.
“If you were to pay teachers like you would a decent babysitter, let's say, you know, $10 an hour per kid and you're in a class of 25 kids and you times that by the eight hour school day and times 180 [days], that's still around $100,000 that teachers should be making,” Shackelford said. “In Oklahoma, I saw one teacher’s payroll that was like $36,000 before taxes.”
Aside from low wages, student teachers can expect other challenges.
“Some challenges I expect are long work days, politics, interacting with students' parents, and differentiating instruction for different academic and learning levels,” said Christina Haug, a junior liberal arts and teacher education major. “I think these challenges just add to the importance and quality of the profession. I’m a little nervous about them, but they do not dissuade me by any means.”
Haug said she looks to the Bible verse John 1:1-14 when she needs to be reminded of why she wants to become a teacher.
“God has already written each of us an epic story — one that we couldn't dream of writing ourselves,” Haug said. “It then becomes our job to simply observe it, and tell it over again, not caring about the way it looks, but caring about the way it is.”
Coughlin said she sees teaching as not only a creative endeavor, but also a ministry that she gets to be a part of every day.
“Matthew 18:3 tells us, ‘Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven,’” Coughlin said. “To love and to learn myself from these little ones has been humbling and trying. I see daily the work of my hands within the classroom.”
Whereas the U.S. Constitution prohibits public school-sponsored prayer or religious indoctrination, Shackelford said she believes that having a religious background as a teacher can help teachers approach their job from an empathetic worldview.
“When you think about it, Jesus was a teacher, first and foremost,” Shackelford said. “I think the fundamental necessity, regardless of what religion teachers have, is just empathy and an ability to encourage and listen to students.”
The wave of teacher strikes sweeping throughout the nation in 2018 began with the 9-day West Virginia strike in late February when about 20,000 classroom teachers shut down schools across all 55 counties, according to Rethinking Schools. Also in February, Los Angeles teachers, representing the country's second largest school district, reached a tentative deal to conclude a 6-day strike. Yet, the movement is evolving into something deeper than calls for school funding, teacher wages, and benefits, according to Axios.
Although the strikes are inconvenient for both students and faculty within schools, they are important in ensuring that the needs of both students and teachers within the public school system are met, Coughlin said.
“As long as there is a federally funded education system, we can expect to see teacher strikes,” Coughlin said. “This reality does not deter me away from this career, but only empowers me to live up to the undaunted and bold teachers before me.”
Haug echoes this statement.
“I think politics and education have always been intertwined — it's part of the story that education tells,” Haug said. “Sometimes the politics part is louder than other times, and that's just part of it.”
Despite the noise created by politics, teachers can still make their voices heard.
“You are confined to making your classroom the best it can be, but you’re also fighting a much larger battle,” Shackelford said.
Preparing to be a teacher can be an emotional process as one essentially pours their personality into teaching, Birmingham said. This is what drives today’s students to pursue their paths toward becoming teachers despite the political ties with the career.
“People still want to be teachers because teaching at its best is an essentially human activity deeply rooted in human relationships,” Birmingham said. “Even though there is a lot of negative press about teaching now, there are still people growing up with the gifts and the calling to engage in these kinds of intense relationships.”
Shackelford said teachers are expected to have everything together, despite them being flawed human beings just like anyone else.
“In my personal experience, the teachers I have the most respect for are the ones who have been incredibly vulnerable and open with me about their own shortcomings and struggles,” Shackelford said. “And so I think a good foundation of good pedagogy is the understanding that you are giving so much of yourself to your class, and they are giving so much of them back to you. And so it really is reciprocal.”
One of the best things about the teacher preparation program, according to the interviewed students, is the guidance of the education professors such as Birmingham, Elizabeth Yomantas, Stella Erbes, Carrie Wall and Michael Gose.
“Mentorship stretches far beyond the classroom,” Coughlin said. ”I have been given a gift far greater than words by the love and continued support of all of my professors.”
Aside from connections with professors, the connections with the children helped Menez realize that one of the best feelings is seeing her “kiddos” understand a concept they first struggled with.
“Being a teacher helped me realize that I might be the only person in a child's life that is rooting for their success and actively pushing them to pursue their education,” Menez said. “I love being able to support my students and help them become kind-hearted adolescents with a passion for learning.”
Haug teaches through the Jumpstart program at Malibu Methodist Nursery school. She recalled a memorable story where she was riding a trike along a path when 4-year-old Gavin waved her down from across the playground, screaming.
“He reached down and grabbed a little furry black thing off my black trike wheel and said, ‘There was a caterpillar on your wheel. I didn't want you to run over it,’” Haug said. “I asked Gavin how he could see the caterpillar from 50 feet away since it blended into the color scheme of the wheel. ‘I just saw it,’ he answered. Gavin taught me that day that I had been looking, but not actually seeing for a long time. I'm working on seeing now, for real.”
It is moments like these that remind student teachers why they choose the career path they did, despite the strikes, the many steps to earn a credential and the need to balance the role of a student and teacher.
“I'm very passionate about literature and language,” Shackelford said. “I just hope that that passion translates not into like, ‘Oh, I want you to love this as much as I do,’ but just show students how nice it is to have something that they love and care about. And so hopefully that helps students find what it is that makes them happy to be who they are, and also challenge them to think critically about their world.”
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