American Renaissance
Previous Story       Next Story       View Comments       Send This Page       Date Archives       Category Archives

Importing Teachers in the District of Columbia

More news stories on Immigration

Barbara Hollingsworth, Washington Examiner, November 10, 2009

District of Columbia Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee is in hot water for firing 266 teachers and administrators Oct. 2, just weeks into the new school year and only a few months after inexplicably hiring hundreds of new teachers. {snip}

According to the federal government’s Foreign Labor Certification Data Center, D.C. Public Schools submitted 46 labor condition applications in 2007 and 2008, giving Rhee authority to import hundreds of foreign teachers on H1B visas without having to make any attempt to find eligible Americans.

With the jobless rate now topping 10 percent, tens of thousands of American engineers, scientists and other professionals would be more than happy to try a second career teaching. {snip}

{snip}

Of course, it’s no coincidence that young immigrants are willing to work for far less than their American counterparts; the wage scale for hundreds of novice teachers in D.C., average age 32, is near the bottom of the District’s unionized pay schedule. But when USA Today reports that there are not enough jobs for all the students graduating from U.S. colleges and universities, why are employers—including school districts—still allowed to import foreigners?

An eerily similar scenario unfolded at the Recovery School District in Baton Rouge, La., after Hurricane Katrina. Just two years after RSD Superintendent Paul Vallas (formerly head of Chicago’s public schools) complained about a serious shortage of teachers, he announced major job cuts—and mainly older Americans were let go.

Guess how they were replaced. Lourdes Navarro, who ran a teacher “bodyshop,” is accused of illegally withholding up to 20 percent of the pay of the young, inexperienced Filipino teachers she brought into the United States to staff RSD’s low-performing schools.

Rob Sanchez, author of the Job Destruction Newsletter, says that teachers union officials have been reluctant “to challenge the liberal consensus that immigration is a good thing. As long as the imported teachers join the union, they are willing to sacrifice their American members.”

Since visa holders can easily be coerced into joining the union and forced to do whatever the union bosses demand, union officials didn’t bother to protect the 20,000 or so American educators who lost their teaching jobs to foreign competitors—many of whom they were forced to train.

{snip}

Original article

(Posted on November 10, 2009)

     Previous story       Next Story       Post a Comment     Send This Page      Search

Comments

1 — Anonymous wrote at 6:40 PM on November 10:

Given the option of either living in a third world nation or becoming a teacher in a Washington DC school, I would choose the former.

2 — Peejay in Frisco wrote at 9:02 PM on November 10:

I wonder how long these foreign teachers will last in classrooms full of black kids? Ill bet that their attrition rate will set records.

3 — Schoolteacher wrote at 10:24 PM on November 10:

2 Peejay: the foreign teachers know what a privilege to go to school, and are absolutely appalled at the behavior they see. Most of them quit and get non-teaching jobs, displacing other Americans. They will Not be deported, any more than an illiterate Mexican would.

4 — Anonymous wrote at 9:40 AM on November 11:

We just had a Mexican female teacher arrested here for having sex with one of her students. She taught English as a second language…of course some of the students (Mexicans) saw nothing wrong with what she did. They all think it is normal and wonder why she was even arrested. Yeah, let’s get more Mexican teachers.

5 — Anonymous wrote at 11:07 AM on November 11:

Far be it from me to defend this official, but could it be she’s importing teachers from the 3rd World because there aren’t enough literate blacks in D.C. to qualify as teachers?

6 — Anonymous wrote at 11:34 AM on November 11:

I spent 3 miserable years in a DC high school. The fact that I made it out in piece still surprises me. I’d sooner go to Afghanistan than go back to NE DC.

7 — Bobby wrote at 5:15 PM on November 11:

Unions are totally corrupt. All of them. They have long ago given up on looking out for the best interests of working class Americans. American union workers are themselves to blame for much of it. You can’t sit around being ignorant of what the union is doing. I belonged to one for a long time, and union meetings were never attended but by a small minority of the membership. It’s just like everything else in life, you have to work at things to make them work for you, marriage, growing crops, making your representatives look out for you,etc. If we sit back and act as if all of these things we are connected to in modern society are simply going to take care of us, then we have no more control than someone who is connected to dozens of machines in a hosptial bed.

8 — Jeddermann wrote at 12:48 PM on November 12:


“I wonder how long these foreign teachers will last in classrooms full of black kids? Ill bet that their attrition rate will set records”

Exactly. The culture shock has to immense. And those “kids” will take advantage and do all they can to intimidate and cause trouble. A few days or weeks at the most and at least 90 % of them will be gone. Would not be the case if they taught in a place like Du Page county IL., for instance.

I am still surprised that Rhee is continuing as head of the schoo’ district in DC. I had thought she would not last too long either. But is not having quite the degree of succes everyone had hoped for. HOPE it was and always will be.


9 — Michael C. Scott wrote at 12:47 PM on November 19:

The good news here is that virtually all of the teachers who have been fired from the DC schools are not white. What educated white teacher, after all, would be willing to teach in a Washington DC public school? For the same reason, it is overwhelmingly likely that the school board REALLY IS unable to find American teachers willing to move to the area and teach in those schools.


Home      Top      Previous story       Next Story      Send This Page      Search