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hard (e.g., ‘‘every waking moment,’’ ‘‘100 hours a week’’) when they first started
teaching, but once they could draw on a backlog of experience, they felt they
could ease up. However, there was no clear correlation
between length of experi-
ence and amount of time teachers reported spending on schoolwork in or out of
school.
For still other teachers, schoolwork has no clear boundaries; teaching for them
is an all-consuming profession. These teachers expressed a love for teaching-both
for the students and the subject. Nearly all taught in ‘‘high-income’’ schools. The
exception was a female math teacher who prided herself on having six prepara-
tions
at Uptown High, a multiethnic high school in an urban district.
I love calculus. I’ve taught that for 19 years, with very good success, and
approximately 75 percent of my students have passed the AP test. That’s tak-
ing all the years together. About 2 years ago, I had 96 percent [pass]—just one
student who did not pass. We’re talking about 23 students in a regular old
high school. We had the best results of all the public schools in the city of
Pine. Better than the magnet schools and the specialty schools. And the kids
have gone on to college. I have contact with a lot of them. A lot of them are
now
working as engineers, doctors, and computer people, doing all kinds of
wonderful things. A lot of them come back, or call me up, write me a note.
An elementary teacher described arriving at school at 6:30–6:45 a.m. and some-
times staying until 9:00 p.m. at night. She was in charge of staff development for
the
district, and, though ‘‘exhausted,’’ her eyes sparkled as she described the
wealth of experiences she helps to orchestrate: an all-school journal, a young au-
thors’ conference ‘‘where their stories are sent to published authors,’’ and a unit
on South Africa. Words like ‘‘wonderful,’’ ‘‘extraordinary,’’ and ‘‘exhilarating’’ ani-
mated the conversation of these teachers, sometimes along with phrases like ‘‘I
don’t know how long I can keep this up’’ or ‘‘I’m exhausted much of the time.’’
An
AP biology teacher, who has student experiments littering her classroom and
who does ‘‘real science’’ with a small number of students before school and on
weekends, described her involvement:
Well, I usually get there before 7:30 a.m.; on lab days I get there between 6:30
and 7:00 a.m. It’s certainly not unusual for me to stay until between 5:00 and
6:00 p.m. at night. It just gets away from me . . . . I’ll put in a long night
at home, but it’s hard to do that if I don’t have to because I’m so exhausted.
If you get up at 4:30 a.m. and it’s 9:00 a.m., you’re not real efficient. And usu-
ally I’ll catch up on the weekends . . . . I mean, science is a lot of work.
The good scientist, somebody who’s really cutting edge, they’re (sic) probably
spending 80 hours a week in the lab minimum. You know, they’re in there
all the time. It’s . . . . a day and night kind of job. So I don’t know, I wonder