Open Letter to Oklahoma Voters and Lawmakers


I am a teacher. I teach English at the high school of an independent district within Oklahoma City. I love my job. I love your kids. I call them my kids. I keep blankets in my room for when they’re cold. I feed them peanut butter crackers, beef jerky, or Pop Tarts when Michelle Obama’s school breakfast or lunch isn’t enough to fill their bellies. I comfort them when they cry and I praise them when they do well and always I try to make them believe that they are somebody with unlimited potential no matter what they go home to when they leave me.

What do they go home to? Sometimes when they get sick at school they can’t go home because you and the person you’re currently shacking up with are too stoned to figure out it’s your phone ringing. Sometimes they go home to parents who don’t notice them, and those are often the lucky kids. Sometimes they go home to sleep on the neighbor’s back porch because your boyfriend kicked them out of the house and his dog is too mean to let them sleep on their own back porch. They go home to physical and verbal abuse. They go home looking for love and acceptance from the people who created them … and too often they don’t find it.

Many days your children bring the resentment they feel toward you to school with them and they act out against peers, property, or their teachers. When I call you I’m told, “When he’s at school he’s your problem.” Or you beat them, not for what they did, but because it embarrassed or inconvenienced you when I called.

Often, they stay at school with me for an hour and a half after the bell rings because they don’t want to go home to you. Reluctantly, they get on the two buses meant to take home students who stay for athletic practice, and they go away for a dark night in places I can’t imagine.

Over 90 percent of the kids in my high school are on the free or reduced lunch programs. The walk hand-in-hand with Poverty and its brother Violence. They find comfort in the arms of your lover, Addiction. They make babies before they are old enough to vote. Or drive. And they continue the cycle you put them in.

Sometimes I get through to a student and convince her that education is the way out of this spiral of poverty and despair. Then you slap them down for wanting to be better than you.

And you, the lawmakers of this state, you encourage it. I hold two college degrees and have been on my job for 10 years. I was our school’s Teacher of the Year in 2014. I teach kids to read the ballots that keep you in your elite position. I teach them to look behind your lies and rhetoric. I teach them to think for  themselves. The compensation of me and my colleagues ranks 49th in the nation, and is the lowest in our region. I currently earn about $18,000 per year less than I did in 2002, my last year as an office worker for an energy company that merged with another and eliminated my job. I feel like my life has purpose now, but, as I turn 50 this year and wonder how I’ll put my own high school-age kids through college, I have to consider giving up helping scores of kids per year so I can afford to give my own children what they need to find satisfaction in their lives.

And what do you do? You whittle away at education funding. You waste the taxpayers’ money so that our great state faces unbelievable shortfalls and massive budget cuts. You take home a salary that ranks 10th highest in the nation among state legislators and you are inept, uncaring, and an abomination to our democratic form of government.

Those kids who stay after school with me? After Spring Break 2016 they can’t do that. You see, our district can no longer afford to pay to run those late buses. Your kids wade through garbage in the halls because we had to release the custodial crew that cleaned at night. Oh sure, we could make the kids clean up after themselves, except our administrators live in fear of lawsuits, and making a kid pick up the lunch tray he threw on the floor has been considered forced child labor. There’s also the very real possibility that a belligerent kid will just take a swing at one of us — again — because he or she wasn’t taught respect for authority at home. Did I mention how we had to let go of our security officers because we could no longer afford them? We now share one single solitary Oklahoma County Sheriff’s deputy with our ninth grade center and our middle school and alternative school. That’s one deputy for about 1,300 students.

We can no longer afford rolls of colored paper or paint or tape to make signs to support and advertise our Student Council activities. This fall our football team won’t charge through a decorated banner as they take the field because we can’t afford to make the banner. There won’t be any new textbooks in the foreseeable future. Broken desks won’t be replaced. We’re about to ration copy paper and we’ve already had the desktop printers taken out of our rooms.

We live in fear that our colleagues will leave us, not just because they are our friends, but because the district wouldn’t replace them even if we could lure new teachers to our inner-city schools during the teacher shortage you have caused. We fear our classes doubling in size.

We fear becoming as ineffective as you are. Not because we can’t or won’t do our job, like you, but because you keep passing mandates to make us better while taking away all the resources we need just to maintain the status quo. We fear that our second jobs will prevent us from grading the papers or creating the lesson plans we already have to do from home. We fear our families will leave us because we don’t have time for them.

I am the chairman of my department. My teachers could easily take other jobs in the private sector where they would make more money, but so far they have chosen to remain teachers because they love working with kids. How long will they continue to put the needs of students over the needs of family? It’s something we’re all dealing with. How far will you push us? What will you do without us when we leave the classroom or leave the state? It’s happening. You know it’s happening, and yet you do nothing.

You, the representatives, senators, and governor of Oklahoma are creating a population of ignorant peasants fit only to work in the oil field and factories you bring to this state by promising those businesses won’t have to pay their fair share of taxes. You leave our kids in a cycle of poverty and abuse while your pet donor oil companies destroy the bedrock beneath us, shaking our homes to pieces while you deny your part in all of it.

Parents, I beg you to love your children the way we love your children. Vote for people who will help teachers educate and nurture the kids we share. We can’t do it alone anymore.

795 responses to “Open Letter to Oklahoma Voters and Lawmakers”

  1. a few facts First your sate teacher pay does not rank 49. secondly, pay is relative as illustrated from the following
    ” When you adjust average salaries to account for differences in cost of living, we find that, in real terms, teachers are paid most in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Ohio. Our old top three states look less attractive to teach in, although New York and Massachusetts still make the top ten in the list.

    Teachers are paid least in real terms in Hawaii, where an extremely high cost of living greatly reduces the buying power of teachers’ salaries. Vermont and South Dakota round out the bottom three.

    One important caveat to the cost of living data is that the scores are aggregated across the whole state, and do not reflect variations within the state. For example, the cost of living in Chicago is very different from Springfield, IL and teachers’ pay should adjust accordingly. But if you were answering our hypothetical question above, this analysis should give you a place to start looking.”

    As to you earning less than you were, you do realize three things.

    First different jobs have different pay scales, regardless of how good you might be. A janitor, social worker, nurse aide, etc., will not make the same or close to it of the engineer, doctor, college professor, etc. You elected a profession well known to be comparatively low paying

    Secondly, with two masters degrees, it must be assumed you knew what a teaching position paid in your area BEFORE you decided to go into that profession.

    Third, no one forced you to become a teacher or to remain in the situation you describe as a teacher. Surely, you vetted your school before you accepted the assignment.

    In each and every instance you and you alone made the choices to be in your present circumstances.

    1. selective smackdown – you speak only of mr. wedel’s personal financial issues without the slightest glance toward the larger issues affecting the schools, students, and community, which make up the bulk of mr. wedel’s open letter… you’re just another jerk who doesn’t care about the kids….

    2. You must be an aide to a state representative! And I bet your children go to private school. You need to go into the schools that this teacher is talking about. And he probably did vet his school before he went there, he wants to help make the world a better place! We need more people like him, not like you.

    3. Mr. Breen,

      Your willful blindness astounds me and the attitude you display toward your fellow man disgusts me.

      I sincerely hope God gives you the opportunity to repent before it’s everlastingly too late.

      Garl Boyd Latham

      1. actually my kids went to public schools as did my grandkids. we had a very active PTA. I did serve in government and among my positions was a judge and the civilian head of the police department. I founded a special juvenile court division.

        what works is accountability and effective policing, not government dependency. Ive seen schools like you describe and have first hand experience seeing them turned around as I suggest. Ditto neighborhoods.

        increased funding had zero to do with it. It was a plan with accountability for actual progress not dependent on things like hope for change and putting process over actual identifiable results — fewer domestic calls, lower crime rates, kids actually learning, parents held accountable if their kids were truant, etc.

        no cars on jacks, trash all over the yard, drugs sold on the street corners. homes falling down and abandoned were torn down.

        Positive planned actions with verifiable results will always trump mouthing good intentions, whining and saying more money is the solution.

        As a country we’ve spent over a trillion dollars trying to cure poverty, but it’s worse than ever before. It’s too convenient to stay on welfare and blame others for a situation that in the vast majority of situations is self induced.

        I once owned a staffing company, over 1500 employees. We interviewed over 150 people per week and drug tested about 50 per week. It was amazing.

        the fail rate for drugs was about 15%. At least 10% of the people couldn’t afford to get off welfare for jobs paying $15.00 / hr full time. Another 4% only wanted to work long enough to qualify for unemployment.

        Before I owned the staffing company, I created and managed a public organization that placed people with developmental disabilities into private sector jobs. We did one on one training and on the job support.

        In two years the organization was self supporting and needed no further infusion of public funds.

        Bottom line Ive seen both sides of the equation. My experience proven by results is that accountability coupled to the will to achieve verifiable results works.

        1. Mr. Breen~

          If you are so gifted then your talents are being wasted reading and responding to this post. Please go forth and spread your wealth of “knowledge” to the unwashed heathens.

    4. You are a jerk!

    5. John Breen — You are great at tossing out insults, but your post makes you sound like an arrogant, self-righteous, aristocratic jerk. You come across as one who could cares less about dedicated people in professions that are trying to improve education opportunities for kids rich or poor. No doubt you feel the same about dedicated professionals who work in social services, and also fire fighters and law enforcement officers. If this is really your opinion of those who serve others, it’s pathetic, and I feel sorry for you, and for you family and “friends” that have to deal with you.

      1. see the reply I made above your post

    6. You sir, are a moron and either must be one of the horrible parents or imbecile lawmaker this gentleman is talking about…

    7. JWBreen, please read Wedel’s letter as a whole instead of attacking his unfortunate career circumstance now. the problem is education has become an orphan cause, nobody wants to support it because of lack of possible gain. we say our children are our future but we, the people, do not invest enough to ensure their success. are we willing to slide further and further down the list on the international education assessment scales?
      MouzyRay, sorry you are turned off by the letter’s tone. hope you can look past it and join the cause in some capacity.
      Tim Daniels, fortunately or unfortunately we are here in 2016, not in the past where things were or were not worse. we can only do out best with that we have got. please help and improve the state of education in some way so these kids can have a better future. not everything is great in our attempt to draw attention to the possible solutions; but if we pick off pieces here and there and waste time and resources debating about them, then we are just distracting ourselves.
      respectfully, d.i.

    8. Mr. Breen, your response smacks of arrogance and willful ignorance with how bad the nature of public education is throughout this country. My brother is in the military. Should he be killed in action and we publicly grieve, would you have the same response as you did with this teacher? He chose to be in the military and knows he could be killed in combat but is at the mercy of the decisions made by politicians and the dumpster fire that is our government. Seriously, this man is crying out to the public about how bad things are and all you can do is belittle him.

    9. So he’s just suppose to hand the problem off to someone else? Since you’re a person of many judgmental words, what do you suggest he should do? Quit? Put his head in the sand and pretend this isn’t happening. He’s hardly making the an argument about money, rather the horrific conditions these kids are faced with on a daily basis. This is about looking at the bigger picture, rather than picking it apart. There’s no way you can deny how broken our education system is.

    10. When is the transplant?

    11. Seems like John Breen seems to have overlooked the entire point of this article and advocates, instead of better laws and wage, for “smart” people with degrees not to teach…SMH.

    12. Yes, Mr. Wedel, please leave teaching. You owe it to your family to provide for them. This job will not let you do that. What kind of person continues somewhere doing something that only brings problems, ridicule, stress, and physical danger? Not very smart. Teachers should start behaving like their degrees call for. The government, unions, Bill Gates, etc are in charge of the educational system, when it is the teachers that know what should be done and how. Sadly, teachers have become complaining, self righteous, doormats.

      1. ashamed – good name for you. maybe you should change it to *sshole while you’re at it.

    13. Paula B. Navarette Avatar
      Paula B. Navarette

      Do you have a measureable IQ? Your response that anyone with 2 Masters degree should expect to be poor. Yup? Yes. That is what you said, The minds of Doctors and ,Lawyers are developed in part? Yes in schools. I want our Teachers to care and not have to sacrifice any quality of life we all are entitled.

    14. Mr. Breen comes across as an arrogant official. He is not only arrogant, he is also ignorant and completely missed the point of Mr Wendell’s letter. He is a major part of the problem in this country along with the majority of the government officials in every other state and Washington D.C. who have their children in private schools and live in a bubble. They are just don’t care what happens to the children and the people in this country unless you are rich. All officials care about is getting elected and catering to the rich who contribute to their own selfish needs such as their campaigns or the parties they are affiliated with. The poor don’t matter and Mr. Breen seems to have proved that in his reply.

      1. I was so outraged by Mr. Breen’s responses that I typed Mr. Wedel’s name incorrectly. I paid more attention to the content of Mr. Wedel’s letter unlike Mr. Breen.

  2. While I can relate to many of the same issues you face in your educational system as a teacher in MD, I am turned off by the tone of your letter. I find it extremely self righteous and judgmental. Yes, the message you are trying to deliver is warranted, but it should be delivered by a much better communicator.

    1. Better yet, Mr. Wedel’s essay should be read – and judged – by those with a far greater ability to comprehend the direct and heartfelt message being delivered.

    2. Frustration and desperation can cause one to lose the ability to be “a much better communicator”! My suspicion is that what you read is the result of both. You should listen to the key message and care not so much about the “tone” of the message.

    3. For a person that obviously believes they have superior judgment and capability you sure seem incapable of understanding the point of the letter. It is intended to be judgmental and clearly achieves its purpose although it won’t do too much good because it is aimed at politicians and have we met many of those that have the skill to do anything much more than just get elected. Sure Wedel is self righteous but he has a right to be. He has gone to the limit of his skill set and resources in an effort to help our children but the politicians whose responsibility it really is to solve the problems try to blame him rather than praise him or solve the gross problems he points out. It appears you join them because his writing doesn’t suit your intellectual style. I hope that isn’t what you teach your students.

  3. Frank Kennedy Avatar

    People like John Breen will deny the true circumstances in public schools because it is convenient for them to do so. It is only when teachers leave in droves, when the situation become so dire that it can no longer be ignored, that parents will reach for the pitchforks and torches, but by then many children will have paid a severe price for this failure in civilization. I urge all to see Michael Moore’s latest film, “Where should We Invade Next?”, to see how we could be so much better than we are, to get a picture of what constitutes good public education.

    1. Michael Moore??? Yuck

  4. I think there is some sort of ‘falsehood’ that comes from teachers. Part of that falsehood is “Education and money fixes all crimes and issues”. Excuses like-Its because of funding our kids can’t learn or Its because of lack of education they make wrong decisions.
    Or Its everybody is a winner just because someone simply said so…You don’t have to prove or work for anything. Magic confidence just appears because you said it.
    The whole thing is bunk… What is missing is a ‘core’ that comes from parents that care. Parents that hold their kids to a standard. Parents that nurture and take care of their children. Parents that use ‘hardships in life’ to teach their kids. Somehow we have let teachers feel like they need to carry that responsibility and that is not right. Or they feel like they need more money and that ‘creates successful students’. Also false!
    Some of the most brilliant minds of yesterday had nothing. They shared books, lived in cold classrooms, sometimes didn’t eat that well, sometimes they went to school and worked into the hours of the night doing what needed to be done for their families survival. And if they were able to do all that and still learn then why can’t we?
    Lets face it.. Life is paradise compared to 1776-1900’s. Its time we stop making excuses as parents, as teachers, and as a state. Blaming anyone and everyone for our failing students. We need to blame ourselves and make no excuses.

    1. Life is paradise…compared to 1776-1900?!
      You are correct, many great minds did without the advantages we have today. But remember, the challenges of success in the world, in their times, were also different. Americans during that era did not have to compete in a world with equal opportunities and technology. Now they do. Drugs were not prevalent in the one room schoolhouse.
      Classmates didn’t bring automatic assault rifles to class. Most households were the typical atomic family with only one parent in the job market, the other being home when then student came home.
      If you want to compare the letter to other circumstances in this era, go at it. But don’t tell us about the good old days.

      1. I think you just did!

      2. There only some great minds. How about the rest of us?

    2. Paula B. Navarette Avatar
      Paula B. Navarette

      Tim. Thank you for just saying it. Clearly, concise and honestly.

  5. Mr. Wedel’s letter is on point. It remains that love of money is the root of all selfishness. Hence, we find ourselves wrapped up in a Gordian Knot controlled by those we put into power. Let us be careful who we vote for, as we will then get the government we deserve. Our children should not be its unwitting victims.

    1. Spot on! My point entirely…

  6. As a retired teacher, I admire your letter. It’s time teachers in your position speak up. As I teach part time. I advise students to listen to what the people running for office are actually saying when asked questions. Keep the faith.

  7. I agree with you Now let’s also relate this to teachers in high income states Many earning 6 figures plus they also complain You seem like a good person and I agree with you on your case however I also feel that the teachers where I live are overpaid working 180 days a year for six figures

  8. David Condley Avatar

    It is time that the parents of all children step up to the plate and start paying for their own children’s education. Our government is drowning in debt. Our businesses are closing or moving out of the country because of government regulations and the highest business taxes in the world. The average income in the US has dropped $4,000 per year over the last 8 years. Our politicians keep promising more government handouts for “free stuff” to get votes. We are seeing our cities crumble and turn into a wasteland of poverty. And government workers think all we have to do is just raise more tax money. Well folks, it’s all over. Welcome to fruits of socialism.

    1. More Right Wing BS and LIES. You ConservaClown Trolls and your tired worn-out talking points and memes about “Free Stuff.” You want “Free Stuff?” How about the $90 Billion Republicans voted to give to Big Corporations? As opposed to HALF that ammount given to Food Stamps and the truly needy. What we need is to take away Corporate Welfare and give it to the schools. Vote CLINTON-WARREN ’16!

    2. David, did you even READ the essay?!

      Simply put, if parents were already willing to “step up to the plate,” Mr. Wedel’s open letter would have never been necessary.

      Welcome to the fruits of blind ignorance.

      1. David, ignorant, gullible and easily mis-led is no way to go through life. Stop watching so much Fox News, it’s rotting what’s left of your brain.

    3. Quote: The average income in the US has dropped $4,000 per year over the last 8 years.

      And yet the top 1% earners incomes have simply multiplied exponentially.. why is that? because the government is giving ‘free stuff’ to them hoping that they’ll trickle it down to the workers, but that has never happened. If you had the opportunity to put $100 or $100,000 in your pocket or give it to someone else, which would you do? (and considering the eight sentences I know about you, I’m going to assume you would prefer to put it in your pocket – actually it was the quotes around ‘free stuff’ that make me assume this)

      We currently do not have socialism.. we have an oligarchy. Until that changes, nothing will change. the top 1% of the top 1% of the countries wealthiest people and corporations have absolutely no interest in changing that so they pump money into the system to keep it as it is.. syphoning money out of the 99% to fund the lavish lifestyles and bank accounts is obscene. Then claiming they can not afford to pay their workers more is ridiculous. Claiming that paying a living minimum wage (which this country has done in the past) will ruin business is inane and so close to the argument that slave holders had at the abolition of slavery as to make me wonder why on earth we put up with it. If you can not afford to pay your workers a living wage, then you cannot afford to run a business. period.

      We have government so we can all partake in services that benefit us all. As someone who does not have children, I could easily complain about paying taxes to fund the school systems in my community – but I want the next generation to be well educated, because they are the ones that are going to be running this country. I could complain about spending money on fire departments when my house has never burned down but I don’t because I want them there to help other people when their house burns down, and if mine ever does one day, I want them there, and I want them well funded and well trained. I want a government who will protect the people from the corporations.. that will protect the water and air from pollution so we can all continue to live. If you don’t think we don’t need a clean air bill or a clean water bill, just look to the past as to why these laws were invented in the first place. Do you think today’s companies are any more enlightened than they were in the past? if so, get your google-fu going and do even a basic search of corporations fined for pollution, you’ll find them everywhere. Regulation isn’t solely designed to restrict business, it is there to protect the people. and instead of being pissed that it is a little harder to do something or a little more expensive, one should be thrilled that we don’t end up with water pipes full of lead contaminating a whole city.. oh wait..

      as for free college tuition – I think I covered that with primary education. I want educated people running the world. Free health care? same as my local fire department. My Christian faith says I should help the poor and I am beyond okay not having to do that directly (not that I don’t) and I am beyond okay with supporting a government who believes in feeding the young and the old, in providing medical care for those who cannot afford it, heat for those in cold climates who will freeze without help. I am amazed over and over by people who claim to be God-fearing Christians who want a Christian leader, but then claim that universal healthcare and other government assistance is a handout and a ‘freebee’ and freeloaders should be ashamed of themselves. God does not work that way.

      Quote: “We are seeing our cities crumble and turn into a wasteland of poverty.” That is because those top 1%ers are making us all scared about raising taxes. They know that if we start doing it, they are going to lose some of their precious income and have slightly lower bank accounts. Raising the taxes on these people will never make them poor. Never. Even at 50% income tax rates, even at 70% income tax rates.. because their income is taxed just like ours, the increases only take effect on the money over a certain amount. No one in the US is taxed on the first few thousand or so dollars that you make (remember those standard deductions) and it goes up in layers, 10%, then 15% then 25.. etc. Read up on the tax laws..

      Look, we all hate parting with money, but as basic human beings we all know – or we should know – that a community is better than everyone for themselves.. and being a community is not free.

      1. Right on Connie, greed will be the demise of this country.

  9. I agree with so much of what you’ve said. I’m so glad you did.

    I work in a poor suburban city in Massachusetts (over 90% free and reduced lunch), and things aren’t much better here. All these mandates keep coming from above with no $ to fund them. The strain is on the teachers and the students. My poor 10-year-olds don’t get recess anymore. The elementary schools teach ELA and Math all day because that’s what the standardized tests judge them on. They come to 5th grade (the first year of our middle school) with Social Studies and Science deficits + the intangible critical thinking skills those subjects help foster. And all those hours don’t seem to help because so many kids still don’t know how to punctuate a sentence or read above a second grade reading level. There’s a high # of ELLs, SPED kids, and children who have lived/are living through trauma and poverty. The way we’re made to teach often goes against good teaching practices. I’ve been working in public schools since 20013. I’m highly qualified with a M.A. degree + 60 additional credits and 2 teaching certifications. Our districts are making us build on a foundation of sand. I could go on and on. I love the kids, but many days I don’t love how I’m forced to do my job.

    Something needs to change.

  10. Coach&Teacher Avatar

    Been there and done that, in an inner city school, my fellow teacher in the state of Oklahoma. It is a crime what is being allowed to continue in this state when it comes to the education of our future, the kids, of this state. Not 1 of the legislators of this state could/would do our jobs for 1 month or any of the federal legislators for that matter for the income and benefits that we receive. As for many of the teachers from other states commenting on pay, based on cost of living…what a joke, or tone or whatever your feedback is, until you have been here it is ignorant of you to comment until you have been in the same situation(here in the state of Oklahoma). You may think you have a clue, but you do not. Every teaching job in a public school is difficult, I will give you that, but until you have dealt with the same issues that many of the educators in this state are dealing with, on top of it being a difficult job you are really comparing apples & oranges. When it feels like you are taking spoons to a gun fight to start with and throw on top of that the budget shortfalls, it truly feels like we are fighting an insurmountable task without even the slightest view of hope. This state is closing schools, firing teachers and the districts response is to increase already large classes to even larger classes(45-60 in a class that was meant to accommodate 25-30) without the tools to accommodate the 25-30 is ludicrous and trying to teach 45 or more High School kids at a time is a joke. Just like any career this is a choice, and I have chose to fight this battle, but many are choosing to go elsewhere. Its not the teachers that need to leave that are leaving, its the ones that make a difference with kids that most teachers could never reach that are leaving and they will never come back. All of us have our breaking point, whether we love what we do or not. How much longer will it take until the teachers that love what they do say enough is enough. There isn’t enough college students spending the type of $ it takes to get a degree that want to spend that amount of $ to deal with these issues and lack of $ they will make to replace those that are choosing to leave. I wish I had an answer and I applaud what you are doing Mr Wedel keep up the fight for your kids and your classroom. You do make a difference! I hope and pray that something is done to fix the things that are killing public education in this state.

    1. The solution is simple: Fire the Republicans and replace them with Democrats. Problem solved.

  11. Sad that as a teacher he didn’t research his facts. The budget put forth by the Obama administration was chopped to pieces by the Republican party, and upon reaching Oklahoma, idiot Fallin chopped it more, ALL due to the name of the current President being on it. This is also what happened to the health care money to extend the benefits to keep our kids HEALTHY. She rejected any extra money, and refused to expand the program to even a single person.
    Don’t blame the President and his wife, as they had nothing to do with the state’s dismal position. The economy here in Oklahoma has been in the crapper well before President Obama took office.
    That being said, yes we don’t pay enough to the very people creating the new citizens of the world. That should be addressed, but pointing fingers at someone that had no part in your lunches or economy is pointless, and accomplishes nothing.

    1. …and it’s sad that you apparently stopped reading once Mr. Wedel offended your political sensibilities.

    2. Jeff, get off your soapbox just because you don’t like what you hear – that doesn’t make it wrong. Stop watching Faux News too – that truly accomplishes nothing.

  12. Good for you! Great letter. Similar crap is happening in Texas, as I expect you know.

  13. Exactly! Great post!

  14. While Mr. Breen so arrogantly spews out very impressive verbiage with extrapolated sentences I am compelled to wonder where he learned such elegance

    A teacher no doubt, now that he has his education he obviously does not care about anyone else to follow

    What he forgets is that these young people will be the ones making the decision on his Medicare, Social Security, and nursing home benefits

    So even though he’s learned a lot of things in life he has yet to understand the meaning of compassion, or the importance of humble appreciation for what he has been fortunate enough to receive

    That’s okay because one day soon he will be taught a very hard lesson in life

    It’s called karma

    1. Spot on Kyle! ConservaClowns like Mr. Breen give Americans a bad name.

  15. I am contacting you to offer my gratitude for your sincere expressions of concern in your beautifully composed letter. My wife and I are teachers in South Dakota and we have concerns for education that move beyond the state boundaries. Your letter spoke to me… “We fear being as ineffective as you are.”, “How far will you push us?”. Excellent job speaking for all of us!

  16. Preach on friend. My heart goes out to you, your colleagues and your students. Keep up the good fight as long as you can and know that you made a difference for each and every last child you could. You and yours are in my thoughts and prayers.

  17. Steven, I share your frustration. I too started teaching late, at age 38, and spent my career in low-end urban elementary schools, 96% free lunch, 70% second language, high immigrant population, etc. I quit on my 64th birthday, a year ago, two years before I wanted to, nowhere near top pension, because my health couldn’t take it anymore. The evils and waste of the whole system were emotionally manageable, as were the families (I helped a few along the way) and the union, but the stress of dealing with a new principal and her very political building forced me out. All that diversity training I was forced to endure, but no diversity of thought was allowed in her building. I reached a few kids along the way; I run into one or two once in a while. I’m no Pollyanna; I also read about some in the court section of the paper or find out they od’d or were killed. Who knows what happened to most of them. I had a few kids of the kids I taught, again plusses and minuses. My point is, it’s not a totally losing battle. You do what you can.

  18. Thomas M. Erwin Avatar
    Thomas M. Erwin

    Mr. ( I us this term loosely, as it used to be a sign of respect ) Breen:
    I dare you- No, I challenge you to spend one day in my eighth grade, social studies classroom.
    The kids would eat you alive. And even if you did make it through the day, I will bet you’ll never go back for a second day. BTW- what are your education credentials?

    1. Thomas, if you ever get that idiot to spend one day in your class, please sell tickets. I would love to see this idiot eat his words.

  19. Yes, yes! Thank you for saying it! As a fellow educator in the state of Oklahoma I completely agree!

  20. Yes, Mrs. Obama wants to starve children. (Sarcasm). Please provide specifics on what the kids are being fed and how much of that is related to the SCHOOL punishing the kids because they don’t like her and want to prove a (sick) point. It’s happened at other schools. Specifics please…? Then I might read the rest of the letter.

Leave a reply to Eric Darling Cancel reply