Kristine Nannini spent her summer creating wall charts and student data sheets for her fifth grade class — and making $24,000 online by selling those same materials to other teachers. Teachers like Nannini are making extra money providing materials to their cash-strapped and time-limited colleagues on curriculum sharing sites like teacherspayteachers.com, providing an alternative to more traditional — and generally more expensive — school supply stores. Many districts, teachers and parents say these sites are saving teachers time and money, and giving educators a quick way to make extra income.
There is a lot of money to potentially be made. Deanna Jump, a first-grade teacher at Central Fellowship Christian Academy
in Macon, Ga., is teacherspayteachers.com's top seller, earning about
$1 million in sales over the past two years. She believes the site has
been successful because educators are looking for new ways to engage
their students, and the materials are relatively inexpensive and move
beyond textbooks
"I want kids to be so excited about what they're learning that they can't wait to tell mom and dad," she says.
Dozens
of Internet forums have been created to help teachers distribute their
material and pick up ideas from other educators. Teacherspayteachers.com
is one of the biggest. It was started by a former teacher in New York
in 2006 and quickly grew. Others followed, like the sharemylesson.com
run by the American Federation of Teachers, the nation's second largest teachers union, where free curriculum ideas and materials are offered.
While
most characterize these sites as an inexpensive way for teachers to
supplement textbook materials, some teachers may get pushback from
administrators for their entrepreneurial efforts.
Seattle Public Schools'
recently revised its ethics policy, with the new policy prohibiting
teachers from selling anything they developed on district time, said
district spokeswoman Teresa Wippel.
"Anything created on their own
time could also cross a gray line, depending on the item and how
closely tied it is to classroom work," she said.Teacherspayteachers.com currently has about 300,000 items for sale plus more than 50,000 free items.
All
told, more than 1 million teachers have bought or sold items on
teacherspayteachers.com since it began. Teachers had $5 million in sales
during August and September, Edelman said. After paying the site fees,
teachers have collectively earned more than $14 million on the site
since it was founded.
At all
of the websites, the quality varies. Jump said she learned over the
years that her colleagues — and their students — are only interested in
professional-looking materials that offer the kind of information and
instruction they need. Teachers are able to rate items offered for
purchase or distribution.
Teachers
often spend their own money on classroom supplies, despite receiving a
few hundred dollars a year for that purpose from their districts.
Increasingly, teachers say, they are going to these curriculum sharing
sites to look for materials like the ones Nannini and Jump made
available because their funds go further than at traditional school
supply stores.
"I guess I've
created something that everyone really needs," said Nannini, a Grand
Blanc, Mich., teacher who just started her fourth year in the classroom.
Jump
has made a lot of her money selling science curriculum for the early
grades, helping her colleagues teach 7-year-olds about scientific
discovery. She has split her earnings between her family, charity and
her school, including buying one classroom a smart board.
Stephen
Wakefield, spokesman for ASCD, a prominent teacher training
organization that has a blog promoting ways for teachers to get help
online, said no national organizations approve or rate the multitude of
online curricula available to teachers. However many offer lists of
places for teachers to explore, he said.
Kathy
Smith, a Seattle parent with two daughters in public school, says she
knows teachers get materials from a variety of sources and she trusts
them to make good decisions about what they choose to share with their
students.
"I've got a lot of faith in teachers," she said. "I don't see any problem using computer sites for supplementation at all."
Becky
Smith, a special education teacher from rural Alabama, says everything
she has gotten off teacherspayteachers.com has been free. Smith says the
website saves her driving time and cash, because she can buy only what
she needs — not a $20 workbook filled with a variety of things.
She also likes the idea of supporting other teachers, not corporations.
"I was on there for hours just looking for things before school started," she said.
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