The PEBC Network
Click to PEBC.org
Click to EdNewsColorado.org
Click to Boettcherteachers.org
Click to Education Research and Practice

Archive for the ‘Teacher unions’ Category

A parallax view on SB 191

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

With Mike Johnston’s teacher evaluation bill headed towards a vote later today, the heightened rhetoric has now eclipsed the likely impact.  For while I wholeheartedly support this bill, I also think the fevered opinion has given it a prominence that overshadows its relative ability to produce significant change.

With the rising antagonism between supporters and opponents, both sides went for the jugular: CEA publicly attacking Commissioner Dwight Jones and flexing its substantial lobbying muscle, while supporters enlisted the cumulative wisdom of the past 36 years of Colorado governors as well as district superintendents from Mapleton, Harrison, Denver and Aurora. In order to pass/block the bill, both sides must argue to its greatest possible impact. The end result is to inflate SB 191 to an elevated importance that no single proposal could possibly merit.

For if the bill passes (without too much change), it is both unlikely to be either a panacea leading to better educational outcomes for students, or the sudden arrival of nuclear winter for teachers. In truth, SB 10-191 is only one part of the institutional changes we need concerning teachers in public education, and in my view is probably of lesser importance than some related areas.  If this is the only evolutionary step we make for education reform, we are unlikely to crawl out of our current muck and rise to our feet.

To improve the quality of teaching, we need three primary changes (and a lot of secondary ones): First, find a way to move bad teachers out of the classroom. Second, retain the outstanding teachers who voluntarily leave the profession.  And third, widen the pool of potential hires so that we can recruit the best possible candidates into the classroom. Now don’t misunderstand, there are a lot of other tasks — many of these district-related policies that prevent current teachers from being able to do their best work (I have long believed that we have better teachers than we have teaching, due to various impediments). But at a macro level, we need to address these three issues first.

Even rough numbers should help us gauge relative importance.  Colorado hires between 6,500 and 7,000 new teachers annually.  Of these, roughly 50 percent do not progress beyond their 5th year.  In contrast, the number of teachers who are likely to be “evaluated” out of the classroom is far smaller than the number of either better candidates that we might attract, or retaining the best teachers who leave. For without the ability to replace bad teachers with better ones, evaluating teachers out of the classroom will accomplish virtually nothing. While SB 191 may be a substantial change to the teaching profession, by itself it is unlikely to have significant change on educational outcomes for students.

SB 10-191 — laudable and important as it is — only directly tackles the problem of removing bad teachers (although it might help marginally with retention).  Now we all know there are teachers who should not be teaching, but in comparison to recruitment and retention, I think these numbers are fairly small.  My guess is that even if this bill is applied as aggressively as possible, the percentage of teachers affected will be in the small single digits. The impact of SB 10-191, by itself, is unlikely to move the needle of student achievement across the State.

What else should we do?  I’d posit two approaches.

To retain the outstanding teachers who leave the profession, we need to start by abolishing the collective bargaining agreement’s single salary schedule.  In no other profession are the best performers in an industry confined to being compensated at the same rate as their average (or below-average) peers. Most of the people testifying in support or against 191 have achieved professional distinction, and are both recognized and compensated for their accomplishments.  We need to extend to our best teachers the same respect. SB 10-191 may help us better recognize these top performers, but they are unlikely to remain in the profession without accompanying incentives (and this should start with, but not be limited to salaries).

In addition, we need to phase out teacher certification, which serves primarily as an artificial barrier that discourages potential teachers and diverts resources that could be better applied.  Programs like Teach For America and the New Teacher Project have shown no substantive difference between traditional teacher certification and alternative (and usually far less extensive and expensive) methods.

Other avenues of preparation should be offered – both TFA and NTP programs, and expanded teacher residencies, which provide hands-on experience and mentoring. The requirement for teacher certification, and the related increase in pay for advanced degrees with no correlation with teacher quality, primary results in tuition dollars and a transfer of wealth to schools of education that provide little to no value to K-12 students.  While it has been a few years since Art Levine’s seminal report on teacher education, little has changed.

Funding these changes will be hard, but not impossible.  Districts spend considerable amounts on new hires; reducing attrition will eventually have a positive impact on budgets.  But to start, redeploy the salary dollars we have away from fixed raises for seniority and professional certification to instead recognize outstanding teachers as determined by school leadership (which would incorporate, but not be limited by the evaluation procedures in SB 10-191).

Secondly, pursue policies that shift the substantial dollars provided to schools of education into residency and alternative training programs.  Meaningless academic educational programs – most at private universities — suck millions of dollars in tuition and valuable time directly from teachers.  This is a billion-dollar industry that provides limited value — a remarkable waste of resources in the struggle to improve public education.

Prospective teachers should be given a choice between paying for these programs – often highly expensive, particularly given teacher starting salaries – and contributing to residency and other programs (which would also provide jobs upon successful program completion).

So, in the heightened shadow of SB 10-191, here is a modest proposal: migrate teacher preparation from mandatory certification to alternative and residency programs, shifting tuition dollars that enrich private universities to public school systems.  Abolish the single salary structure, using the premium formerly paid for advanced degrees to reward outstanding teachers for the achievements in the classroom.

And in the wake of what I think will be the successful passage of a mostly-whole SB 10-191, do not, for one minute, think that the effort to improve public education in Colorado has taken more than a small step forward, with a long distance still to travel.

Popularity: 42% [?]

Illuminating CEA opposition to SB 191

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

It’s time to take a breath during the calm before Part II of the Senate Education Committee’s SB 191 hearings. But really, how calm has it been? With among other developments the four living Colorado governors (three Democrats, one Republican) chiming in with a published op-ed to say “at this time no proposal has greater promise for transforming education in Colorado than Senate Bill 10‐191,” it’s getting rather lonely on the No side of the ledger.

Desperate to muster its opposition forces, the CEA is calling in its tax-funded release time favors (MP3) to bring several dozen teachers to the State Capitol to lobby legislators and help pack the seats in the Old Supreme Court chambers:

[Republican state senator Nancy] Spence is wondering what the reasoning is for pulling teachers out of classrooms and then not having them actually testify, on record, before the committee. Spence said that the only on-the-record opponents of the bill were union officials—not rank and file teachers or parents.

“I was astonished that the CEA leadership from across the street monopolized the testimony time and the rank and file teachers were not given the opportunity to testify,” said Spence. “I would have liked to hear from the rank-and-file teachers on this bill that their union leaders are opposing. So far we’ve only heard from the union officials.”

And what we heard was only illuminating if you read between the lines. A new amendment agreed to by sponsor Michael Johnston clarified possible concerns, extended timelines and eased the evaluation requirements on principals. Still, CEA won’t budge from its opposition (and even found a way to drag its subsidiary, the Colorado PTA, into testifying against SB 191). Lawmakers both Democrat and Republican on the panel probed union officials testifying to try to discern what it would take to get them on board.

In his posting yesterday, Alan correctly identified one key linchpin in CEA’s opposition:

Why not just come out and say it: The CEA does not want teachers evaluated based on standardized test scores, even using a growth model, which sets a lower bar than using “status.” I’ll tell you why CEA won’t come out and say it: Because that sounds just as bad as it is.

The other conditio sine qua non for the union to support the bill? CEA doesn’t want to see even one ineffective senior teacher lose access to their special tenure-like job protections.

On both fronts, the union’s stances put them out of touch with the majority of Colorado voters. Seeking to balance the new Stand for Children poll’s powerful findings concerning Coloradans’ support for reforms to teacher evaluations, tenure and direct placement, CEA executive director Tony Salazar cited a 2009 Gallup poll that he said shows the public considers lack of funding a more crucial need for K-12 education than lack of good teachers.

Which 2009 Gallup poll was he talking about? Perhaps this one: “Public Says Better Teachers Are Key to Improved Education.” Then again, maybe not. In any case, I’m quite certain union officials weren’t referring to this one, though CEA’s recent actions aren’t doing anything to help reverse that trend.

Popularity: 42% [?]

Where’s the urgency?

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

I will leave it to others to debate the fine points of Mike Johnston’s Senate Bill 10-191, also known as the teacher evaluation and tenure bill. Read the wide range of comments, pro and con, on our web site and blog for some thought-provoking debate. In particular, Robert Reichardt and Rona Wilensky wrote blog posts that level pointed criticism at the bill.

But as I read Todd Engdahl’s Education News Colorado story on amendments, and Jeremy Meyer’s Denver Post story on Gov. Bill Ritter’s support for the revised bill, I marvel yet again at how difficult it is to make real progress on important issues in this day and age. Sometimes you have to pull back, look at the bigger picture and gain some perspective. In this case, what you see is depressing.

Let’s face it: the Colorado Education Association is about as likely to support this bill, in whatever form, as Republicans were to support health care reform. So why waste any time trying to placate an obstinately self-interested organization? Delaying full implementation until the 2014-15 school year just increases the likelihood that unforeseen factors will intervene and doom its implementation.

The CEA will push hard to weaken the bill and to stall it, until it dies or becomes so diluted that it’s meaningless. Meanwhile, the current system, which everyone admits is dysfunctional, will continue to serve children badly.

No, the bill isn’t perfect — far from it. Major change is hard, and there will need to be improvements, modifications and/or enhancements. That doesn’t mean we should do nothing, or wait forever to make a bold move. I am continually amazed and appalled by the lack of urgency displayed by people who should — and do — know better.

CEA President Bev Ingle is a nice woman, and a member of the board of the organization for which I work. But I must take issue with her op-ed column in today’s Post. Her column employs the kitchen sink approach to opposing Johnston’s bill. It’s too expensive. It’s an unfunded mandate. The timeline (pre-amendents) is too rushed. It won’t help Colorado win round two of Race to the Top.

Why not just come out and say it: The CEA does not want teachers evaluated based on standardized test scores, even using a growth model, which sets a lower bar than using “status.” I’ll tell you why CEA won’t come out and say it: Because that sounds just as bad as it is.

Just watch: Either a Republican will win the governorship this fall or the GOP will gain control of the Colorado House or Senate. Then a much harsher bill will get crammed down the throat of the CEA, whose members will wish their leadership had been a bit more enlightened when this relatively modest bill was proposed.

Popularity: 19% [?]

Good riddance?

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

News that the Colorado Education Association won’t endorse Colorado’s round two Race to the Top application may just be the best thing that could have happened to the state’s chances to grab a share of federal largesse.

Yes, the U.S. Department of Education sent mixed signals in its round one awards, favoring states that pushed major change AND won buy-in from unions. But Colorado got stuck in a weird in-between place, with the CEA endorsing the bid, but many local affiliates declining to sign on.

If the legislature passes Sen. Mike Johnston’s bill in the face of stiff CEA opposition, the state will demonstrate its willingness to forge ahead with bold reforms. If Arne Duncan and Co. act as tough as they talk, this should help Colorado climb back toward the front of the pack.

Of course, then there’s the question of how feasible it is to implement major change when teachers’ unions dig in their heels and resist. So this drama has several more acts to go.

Popularity: 34% [?]

For CEA there’s transparency, then there’s…

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Overshadowed by a bigger education reform issue looming in the state legislature, this Friday’s scheduled conference committee on House Bill 1171 could provide an interesting sideshow. It started out as a simple bill to create efficiency and simplicity by easing reporting requirements on local education agencies.

But the Colorado Education Association (CEA) wasn’t happy with one provision in the bill that would have stopped districts from having to report the mid-year budget form CDE-18 (aka “uniform budget reporting”). On their blog, CEA leaders offered up their argument for preserving the CDE-18 form reporting:

CEA has maintained for many years that school districts should be required to demonstrate transparency to the taxpayers by reporting their annual budgets and expenditures in easy-to-understand lay terms — and that should include reporting all budgets in the same format….

There’s no doubt I appreciate government transparency as much as (or probably more than) the next person, and applaud CEA for getting on the bandwagon. But let’s be fair and call the CEA’s priorities into question. What are the relative costs and public benefits for grinding information into the complex CDE-18 form vs. posting all expenditures online for public viewing, for example?

As far as I can tell, the document is of no use to anyone but the union headquarters across the street from CDE — where it provides tax-furnished data collection that informs union demands for employee compensation. Furthermore, the modest school transparency bill HB 1036, which Gov. Bill Ritter signed into law yesterday, now requires school districts to post very similar information on their own websites.

Meanwhile, the type of transparency that provides detailed accounting for how public moneys actually are spent–rather than promises for spending that often end up varying significantly from reality–has received at best a yawn from CEA. Why? Can’t use that information for bargaining purposes, I suppose.

Is there a reason the well-funded CEA can’t take the information required under HB 1036 and reformat it for its own purposes? Why during this round of painful budget cuts should we preserve such perks not in the public interest? (This is far from the only perk, of course.)

The original version of HB 1171 ended the CDE-18 reporting requirement. It was amended back in on the senate floor. Will the issue come up in Friday’s conference committee? Given political realities, it doesn’t look that way. Greater transparency is a no-brainer, but it’s worth noting what transparency really means to different groups.

Popularity: 15% [?]

Quote of the day

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

Regarding union support for states’ Race to the Top applications:

“Experience has shown that reform that starts with the premise that you can only go as fast as the slowest ship in the convoy tends not to go very far at all,” said analyst Frederick M. Hess of the American Enterprise Institute. “I’m worried that it gives a fundamental veto, or at least a lot of influence, to the least reform-minded participants.”

(From the Washington Post)

Popularity: 11% [?]

PBS examines unions and Race to the Top

Friday, March 26th, 2010

John Merrow is a tough and fair-minded reporter. In this report, which aired tonight (Friday), teachers’ unions come out looking not so enlightened.

Popularity: 33% [?]

“Blame teachers unions” wins NYC debate

Friday, March 19th, 2010

With everything going on, you may have missed Tuesday’s high-powered, Intelligence Squared-sponsored, New York City-hosted debate of the proposition: “DON’T BLAME TEACHERS UNIONS FOR OUR FAILING SCHOOLS”.

The esteemed opponents of the proposition — the Hoover Institution’s Dr. Terry Moe, former U.S. Education Secretary Rod Paige, and Larry Sands of the California Teacher Empowerment Network — won the day. Not just based on my biased account, but on the audience: Of the 33 percent of the audience that was undecided before the event, 25 percent ended up blaming teachers unions, 1 percent ended up not, and the other 7 percent remained undecided.

Arguing on the losing side were American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten, local AFT teacher rep Kate McLaughlin, and ABC Unified Superintendent Gary Smuts. Judge for yourself, but I saw their argument boiling down to the claim that unions form to help kids and that they really aren’t opposed to all the reforms like charter schools and streamlining tenure.

Interestingly, Obama’s name only came up once during the debate, and it was invoked by Terry Moe in support of tying teacher evaluations more closely to measured student test performance. But judging by UFT blogger Leo Casey’s recent dismay with the Obama administration (“Where did all the hope go?”), maybe it’s not too surprising his side left the President’s name out of it.

But I at least applaud the AFT officials’ (plus one superintendent who negotiates with an AFT affiliate) willingness to come forward and debate and defend their position. Moderated forums like this one can be enlightening and clarifying moments, especially in a debate about an issue of such importance. At least some of what AFT argued for is defensible.

But where was the NEA? Were they invited? I’d be interested to know, because the absence of education policy’s 800-pound gorilla from such a significant and relevant event may speak volumes.

If you don’t have time to read through the 45-page transcript of the debate (PDF) — and as transcripts go, it’s fairly engaging and entertaining — Intelligence Squared is selling a DVD for $20. You know, just in case you have a few extra bucks to throw around.

Popularity: 52% [?]

Does CEA care more about school funding or political allies?

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Sure, the Colorado Education Association loves to increase funding for K-12 schools and retain member jobs. But sometimes, its pleas for school funding simply don’t add up. Yesterday’s CEA blog entry “Amazon: play fair, support school funding” is just such an example:

In other words, Amazon firing its affiliates does nothing to impact the fact that Amazon.com is still required to collect sales tax or, at a minimum alert their customers to this requirement under state law. The giant retailer is using its political weight to protest losing its tax-free status and having to compete on par with other Colorado retailers.

Why should you care? Because sales tax revenues fund public schools. A portion of all sales tax revenue goes into the State Education fund, the first source for nearly all K-12 public education programs, from the state’s share of Total Program to funding for full-day kindergarten. (more…)

Popularity: 17% [?]

Alternatives to seniority-based layoffs

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

In the discussion regarding direct [see comment below] placement of teachers, it is sometimes perceived that this system is the standard course of events — that our nation’s public school systems all have a similar process.  A report from the National Council on Teacher Quality (NCTQ) finds that there are several practicing alternatives to how individual school districts approach this decision:

The report … covers 100 districts nationwide, 75 of which reward seniority with job security. But most states don’t mandate seniority-based layoffs; they leave the decision up to districts. Twelve districts in the TR3 database use teacher-performance criteria, with Jackson, Mississippi, in particular, basing 60 percent of its decision on individual performance, 20 percent each on seniority and certification. In Davis, Utah, teachers who performed unsatisfactorily on their latest evaluations shoot to top of the layoff list.

The report states (or understates) “The factory model approach of last-hired, first-fired is unusual among white collar professions” and goes on to note the wide impact on students from the seniority-based layoff process.  It further points out that two of the sacred cows of the teaching profession — preserving jobs and increased teacher diversity — are negatively impacted by this process.

Instead of laying off 875,000 teachers to accommodate a 10 percent reduction in school budgets nationwide, districts would only have to lay off roughly 612,000 teachers — saving more than 250,000 jobs — by allowing criteria other than seniority to be factored into decisions about reductions in force.

In addition, seniority-based layoffs may cut into hard-won diversity in the teacher corps. For example, in California, school districts have managed to increase the number of minority teachers by 14,000 across the state since 2001, but layoffs of these more junior teachers under a last-hired, first-fired policy could erase much of this progress.

Layoffs are never easy, but faced with their inevitability, doing them as well as possible is deeply important.  This report is worth a read.

Popularity: 21% [?]

Daniels fundColorado League of Charter SchoolsColorado Childrens CampaignCollege InvestPitton FoundationsDonnell-Kay Foundation