I see an effectiveness problem. Unions haven't been effective on the policy front, have they? No, instead they've done nothing but ask for more and more pay and driven many states and school districts to make major cuts.
you are blaming the person who is shot for being in the way of the bullet.
Two things are a problem with your position.
1. Teachers (in general) are paid crap for their education and experience levels.
2. Executive/Administrative staff is often included in the budget. The Golden Parachute problem with a school supervisor at my HS made it so that his 20% pay increase for the last two years of his "service" was done at the expense of the teachers themselves, and then the pension fund then had to bear the brunt of an inflated pension after he retired.
All the Union's fault.
Sure.
I've seen extra-curricular programs, art, music, foreign language programs, and transportation cut in districts simply because the unions wouldn't accept a pay freeze. That kind of bullshit has to stop.
Ah, so BECAUSE a professional does not accept being paid the same or less, it is all their fault that the children suffer. Not the state for not allocating more funding.
Straw man.
By all means, feel free to go off the deep end, but try to get a grip on something: they asked for the technology, they were trained on using the technology, and in many ways it's not the technology itself they struggle with... BUT IN TEACHING WITH IT; something they're supposed to be good at doing already.
Deep end makes no sense. Nice way to discredit w/o actually responding to the assertions posted......
As for "them" asking for it. People, ALL people "ask" for things. Getting them to USE it is another thing altogether.
Also, your definition of "they" is vague. Sometimes "they" is just the guy that is making the decisions (department chair?) who may, like many of us, want to get people to try something new. But "They" end up speaking for all when it may only be a few that truly desire to use it.
And associating this with Unions and pressuring people to change or leave, is not a fair conjunction.
After having a mother teach in a number of schools for most of my life (probably a good 30 years), and knowing her co-workers, and reading the news, and being aware from many angles what this is like, hearing a person say they know more simply because they tried to teach teachers technology (TTT) is a bit of a stretch.
Stop smelling the mimeograph fluid there bubbie (and yes, I remember being in the "ditto room" with my mother more than 20 years ago over the summer as she prepared her lesson plans).