4
Reasons to Teach in a Private School
Things That Matter To Teachers
Teaching in a private school has many advantages
over teaching in a public school. For most of us it comes down to the reality
that all we really want to do is teach. We find the administrative side of the
job confining and time consuming. Minimal bureaucracy has to be the biggest
advantage of teaching in a private school. There are other advantages.
Private
schools create a climate for serious teaching with the following:
-
thin management structure
-
small class sizes
-
small schools
-
ideal teaching conditions
Thin Management Structure
A private school is its own independent entity. It's not part of a large
administrative group of schools like a school district. So you don't have to
go up or down through layers of bureaucracy to deal with issues.
Private schools are autonomous units of
manageable size. The organization chart typically has the following upward
path: Staff->Department Head->Head of School->Board. You will find additional
layers in larger schools, but even there it's a pretty thin structure. The
advantages are obvious: responsiveness to issues, clear communication
channels. You don't need a union to help you deal with issues when you have
easy access to administrators.
Small Class Sizes
This issue goes to the heart of what we teachers are all about. Small class
sizes allow us to teach effectively, to give our students the individual
attention which they deserve, and to accomplish the goals which have been
entrusted to us. Private schools typically have class sizes of from 10-12
students. Parochial schools generally have larger class sizes, but even they
are smaller than those in comparable public schools. Contrast this with your
public schools which range from 25-30 or more students per class. At that
class size you become a traffic cop, not a teacher. Union mandated class size
is not an issue in private schools.
Small Schools
Most private schools have 300-400 students. The largest independent schools
top out at only 1100 or so students. Compare that with public schools with
2,000-4,000 students and you can understand why students in private schools
are not just numbers. Teachers can get to know all their students as well as
others throughout the school community. Community is what private schools are
all about.
Ideal Teaching Conditions
Teachers want to be creative. They want to teach their subject. They want to
light the fires of enthusiasm for learning within their young charges. Because
private schools adhere to the spirit, but not to the letter of state mandated
curricula, there is great flexibility in the choice of texts and of teaching
methodologies. You don't need a union agreeing to the adoption of this text or
that methodology for use in the classroom.
Common Goals
Private school students are there because their parents want them to have the
best possible education. Parents are paying serious money for that service.
Consequently everybody expects the very best results. If you are passionate
about your subject, you feel the same way. Only the best will do.