Blog

Analysis: Where We Stand, Post Election and Mid-Pandemic

By Brenda Ortega MEA Voice Editor MEA members’ hard work to elect friends of public education up and down the November 3 General Election ballot paid off in many ways, but one of the most significant and least ballyhooed wins came in the state Supreme Court race. With much of the post-election news focused on President Donald […]

lovevirtually (and actually, too) – MEA Members Create Wellness Toolboxes for Students

By Brenda Ortega MEA Voice Editor As a behavior specialist in Kalamazoo Public Schools, MEA member Tia Whitley describes her job as advocating for students’ academic success by providing them additional supports, resources and services. But what happens when school is closed? How can Whitley and other behavior specialists intervene meaningfully when they can’t see or physically […]

Amy Quiñones: Charting New Waters

Lots of people say it in these unusual days of our lives, but for MEA member Amy Quiñones it’s literally true: She did not sign up for this. The job she’s doing in Rockford Public Schools—COVID Response paraprofessional—didn’t exist before this year. “I jokingly say that the brochure lied,” Quiñones said. “Never before has a […]

Jacob Oaster: leader, teacher, innovator

MEA member Jacob Oaster is a mid-career vocal music teacher who knows how to manage a teaching load of 150 sixth through twelfth graders split into five different choirs, but 2020 has taken him back to a less certain time in his career. “I’ve worked harder this year than I ever have,” Oaster said. “It doesn’t feel like […]

Karen Christian: COVID ICU survivor

MEA member Karen Christian can recall a few moments of panic from her COVID-19 diagnosis in late September, starting with the shock of hearing a nurse on the phone saying the test was positive. That was on a Monday. The president of United Teachers of Flint, Christian thought she’d been battling a sinus infection—head congestion—since the previous Monday. […]

Karen Moore: secretary with a purpose

By Brenda Ortega MEA Voice Editor One of Karen Moore’s proudest accomplishments as Grand Blanc West High School secretary is the “zen room” she created a few years ago—outfitted with soft lights, gentle white noise, a lilac-scented diffuser, and coloring books, crayons, and puzzles. It’s a testament to her powers that she convinced the building principal to give […]

My View: Eyes Wide Shut

By Robyne Muray In a recent professional development that I attended in my district, the presenter discussed how our biases can distort our intentions and lead to inequity. I had a flashback of a time when I was an offender—when my unconscious bias directed my interaction with a student. Many educators have been facing up to similar uncomfortable truths this year amid […]