Portland Observer, December 22, 1982 Page 3 METROPOLITAN Street Beat Hughley chosen for council Crassrool News, N .W .— M arie Hughley, curriculum coordinator at King School, became the first Ore­ gon classroom teacher to be ap­ pointed to the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (N C A TE). " I have no idea why I'm the first one in Oregon. 1 think I was nominated by the Portland Associa­ tion o f Teachers. I received a call from D .C . telling me I was consid­ ered for the post and would I ac­ cept. Later my appointment came through. M rs. Hughley explains what N C A TE responsibilities are. “ They monitor and evaluate teacher educa­ tion programs. A college has accreditation for seven years and then the college asks for a renewal. This body (N C A T E ) either denies or grants new accreditation. New colleges apply and we would evaluate whether the teacher train­ ing program will receive accredita­ tion. There are eight teachers, eight college adm inistrators and eight people from other organizations who sit on the board. Along with two individuals from the office of Education. The board consists of 26 people.” As a classroom teacher Mrs. Hughley feels she is prepared to evaluate student teachers just coming out of college. Among the battle cries of educa­ tion is the fact that a student can sit in class for 12 years and never learn how to read. " I t ’s as much a puzzle to teachers as it is to anyone else. We are constantly testing and trying new programs to help the student learn. Eor the reason you just stated came the push to go back to the ba­ sics. Basic reading, language arts and mathematics are the emphasis now, because for some reason there has been a gap in the basic skills training. I f that foundation is strengthened then everything else will fall into place." Nowadays, when you bring up the career of teaching, the burn-out syn­ drome is considered. ‘ •There wax a study done up at the Health Science Center on stressful occupations and teaching rated near the top. Part of the reason for that is the discipline problem has increased. ALong with the restrictions placed on teacher creativity. We have a lot o f hard working teachers who take home­ work home and put in a lot of extra hours. So, there is burn-out in every profession where people work hard." Ms. Hughley says its the milieu of by Lanita Duka and Richard Brown W ith Christmas here and gone, the S tra a t B oat team wondered, “ Is the Christmas of 1982 different from other Christmases?*’ Robert Oliva Unemployed Kathy Newton Co-editor It w ill be d ifferen t in little ways but it w ill remain the same. We a re n 't spending as much but doing more. For the blacks it's a money crunch. I d id n 't get my kids anything because I've been out of work for six months. It ain't worth looking. J*. Ellen Allege Unemployed 1 only celebrate every other year and this is an off year Peo­ ple are friendly this year rather than in a rush to buy. It's slower and that makes it nice. MARIE HUGHLEY problem for the teachers of the '80s. “ Children are different. They are more assertive because they are ex­ posed to a lot more today, because of T .V . and travel. They are bright­ er and this leads to some defiance and disrespect. Children today feel their rights are being violated when rules are a p p lie d ." She says she doesn't find a discipline problem at King and calls the teachers and stu­ dents, "impressive.” Ms. Hughley believes time is a gnnrt je e rh e r'» greatest enemy. t W M ewenetthsm requirements are so much that we do not Have enough time to cover all areas with our stu­ dents. We only have six hours in a day and a very creative teacher might have ideas which go beyond that. 1 worked in four schools in the Portland area and King is where we have the strongest staff.” As a new member of the National Council for Accreditation of Teach­ er Education. Mrs. Marie Hughley will spend a week in Washington, D .C . and M aryland for training. "T h e first full council meeting will be in March. We will have material to evaluate from teams which were sent out to various colleges. We will go over to see if the colleges are meeting the standards set by the council.” N o matter how much training a teacher receives, if a teacher doesn't feel it in her heart she might as well not teach. “ You have to love teach­ ing. The only time I'm truly happy is when I have a class fu ll o f stu­ dents. This is the true lest of a teach­ er. Whether or not she love* ano can feel it." Archia bean Unemployed Chris Wlnklay Elect. Technician No, nothing much has changed. Santa Claus is still alive. I'm not much of a holiday person and it takes care o f all my spare money. I'm out o f a job this year. I have an 11- and a 12-year old. Every year I've been able to buy them something except this year. No money, no presents. I'm not even drawing unem­ ployment. It's tough. 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