Saying families are breaking down and societyâs values are changing, a Sweetwater County teaching group is begging school leaders in Rock Springs to help teachers with reported behavioral chaos among students.
The group ultimately brought the issue back to a reported lack of funding as well.
âMany students are apathetic toward education at the best and loudly disruptive â including yelling of expletives and tossing of things not meant to be tossed â at the worst,â said Marty Albert, vice president of the Sweetwater Education Association, during a Monday meeting of the Sweetwater County School District No. 1 Board of Trustees.
The SEAâs prepared statement concluded with the hope that the district can get more money from the state Legislature.
Responding to a Cowboy State Daily inquiry about possible causes and solutions, Nicole Bolton, the districtâs human resources director didnât address the behavior issues, but agreed more funding would help: âThe District supports its teachers and shares their concerns about the adequacy of funding for Education Finance in the State.â
âFamilies Have Changedâ
Teachers have to divert teaching time into classroom management, Albert told the school board Monday, adding that studentsâ mental health and ability to learn are taking a hit amid the disruptions.
Itâs worse in the older grades, said Albert, but all grade levels are struggling.
âWe need help,â Albert said.
âA popular opinion held by many outside of the teaching profession is that kids have not changed. This is simply not true,â said Albert. âFamilies have changed. Society has changed. And these changes are reflected in student bevaior.â
Fifteen years ago, behavioral problems with students were anomalies, she said.
Reaching out to parents has had âabsolutely no effectâ in some instances, even when the parents talk to their students.
Albert said the school may blame teachers for upcoming low scores on the stateâs standardized test, the WyTOPP. But blaming poor behavior will be seen as a âcop-out.â
Many teachers want to leave. Everyone is working hard. Counselors are overwrought and have to overlook the lesser needs, she said.
More Counselors, Please
Cheryl Notman, SEA president, read the second half of the organizationâs prepared statement because of time constraints on each public commenter.
She said she appreciates that the district has found grant money to hire counselors, but the teachers need more counselors and social workers to help students dealing with abuse, suicidal ideation, depression, âand the many other woes that come with the breakdown of the home.â
Some teachers resort to testing kids for behavioral or mental issues, she said.
âTeachers have been criticized for overidentifying students for special education testing â yet at this time this is our only recourse,â said Notman.
The district should station behavior teachers in every school for general-education students; more counselors to support all students; social workers for both general-ed and special-education students; and a parent education specialist to help parents work with the schools, Notman said.
âWe know a large number of people on our insurance are taking anti-anxiety medication,â she added, saying the job has become ânon-viable.â
Lastly, Notman said, the SEA supports the districtâs lawsuit against Wyoming, where some schools and the Wyoming Education Association are suing to force more money from the Legislature.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.





