A cornerstone of any strong educational system is the recognition that teaching is a profession, not a set of tasks. Educators earn licenses through years of training, experience, and ongoing ethical responsibility—just as electricians, accountants, or attorneys do. Their professional judgment is not a luxury; it is the foundation that ensures students receive meaningful, responsive, human-centered education.
Yet that foundation is being deliberately weakened. Across every level of schooling, corporations are aggressively marketing products designed to standardize and mechanize teaching. These products rarely expand educators’ creative or intellectual scope; instead, they narrow it. They reduce learning to a sequence of bite-sized tasks—categorizing data, retrieving information, mapping oversimplified cause-and-effect relationships—that mirror the logic of machines rather than the complexity of human thinking.
When instruction and assessment are forced into the rigid structures required by these products, it becomes easier for companies to argue that teachers are no longer practitioners of a craft but simply operators of a system. That is the real danger: once teaching is reframed as a series of programmable steps, corporations can claim that their technologies, not trained educators, are the “efficient” solution.
This shift has direct financial consequences. If a teacher’s role is defined as following a pre-scripted digital program, then the profession’s economic value is intentionally diminished. It becomes far harder to argue for higher wages, improved working conditions, or respect for professional autonomy when the work is mischaracterized as something that can be automated or outsourced. The devaluation of teaching is not an accidental by-product—it is part of a broader business model that treats public education as a market and teachers as cost centers to be minimized.
Unionized educators must resist this commodification of our work. The corporate push to mechanize learning is not about improving student success; it is about extracting profit from public resources. Every dollar spent on products that deskill teachers is a dollar diverted away from classrooms, communities, and equitable learning opportunities. Protecting educator independence is therefore both a pedagogical and economic imperative.
If we fail to confront this trend, we risk not only losing our professional autonomy but also allowing the financial logic of private corporations to redefine what education is, who it serves, and whose expertise matters. Our responsibility—as educators, as union members, and as guardians of the public good—is to defend the irreplaceable human craft at the heart of teaching.