The classroom and COVID-19: Teachers say they want to be ‘treated like real people’

This story was published in partnership with The 19th, a nonprofit, nonpartisan newsroom reporting on gender, politics and policy.

At a school board meeting in Phoenix this month, parent after parent got up to speak, letting the tensions of a year of uncertainty spill out inside a musty auditorium at the Queen Creek Unified School District. 

At issue was the coming school year, which was set to start Aug. 17 almost entirely in-person. The end of the previous term had challenged their children, many parents argued, and it was time that they return to the classroom. 

Why, asked one dad and a physical education teacher at a local high school, if a registered nurse he knew who is a cancer survivor had not missed a day of work, were other teachers saying they wouldn’t be willing to return? 

“You can make that choice to come into work and say that …you love your profession,” he said, “then I’ll see you on the 17th, brother.”

The audience exploded in raucous applause.

A Columbia County student returns to Evans Middle School in August 2020.

Children went up to speak, too.

“I hope they let me go back to normal school in person,” said one kindergartner. Another pleaded with the district through sobs: “Please, let us go back.”

But some teachers told another story: In the week before the start of school, they felt they had few options.

Resignations had started at Queen Creek – eight teachers gone between the end of July and early August. Unlike other districts across the country that were adopting a hybrid model allowing teachers to move online if they prefer, online learning in Queen Creek will come from teachers outside the district. 

Many teachers feel trapped. The tension in Arizona and around the nation is dredging up a conversation on teaching contracts that in a typical year ensure educators don’t renege too close to the start of the school year – thus leaving the district scrambling to find a replacement – by imposing fines, or threatening a temporary suspension or revocation of a teaching license. 

But as special education teacher Karen Oliver stressed when she spoke at the August school board meeting, this isn’t a typical year. 

Oliver had already resigned in July, knowing she, at 61, could not risk returning to in-person learning, particularly with an 87-year-old sick mother in Michigan who she planned to visit.

Still, the district was holding her to her teaching contract and fining her the customary penalty – 3% of her salary, or nearly $2,000.

“I am being held under my contract,” Oliver told the board, asking the district to waive the resignation fees. “I need to take care of my mother. I love my students, I have worked hard to make sure my responsibilities are taken care of. This has been a hard decision.”