Dear
Colleague,
As many of you know, teachers throughout most of the country
are paid by the step-and-column method, whereby salaries are based on the
number of years on the job. Teachers can also increase their salaries by taking
“professional development” classes, despite conclusive research that these
classes have little if any effect on student learning.
When teacher salary schedules first came to be about 100
years ago, they were designed to eliminate discrimination due to race,
ethnicity and gender. With such discrimination illegal today, is there really
any need for them?
Not according to the Brookings Institution, which has come
out with a report that shows the detrimental effects of the step-and-column pay
regimen.
The
evidence presented here demonstrates a strong association between inequalities
across teacher compensation, school funding, and pension benefits that we
believe warrants greater attention. In light of an aging workforce creating a
growing number of teacher vacancies, and a new generation of increasingly
mobile millennial teachers, these findings have important implications about
how public resources are allocated across teachers and students.
To read more of this provocative report, go to https://www.brookings.edu/research/scrutinizing-equal-pay-for-equal-work-among-teachers/
Using
data from the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights, a study
released in September by the Fordham Institute delves into the depths of the
teacher absentee problem. On average, teachers miss about eight school days a
year due to sick and personal leave, while the average U.S. worker takes only
about three-and-a-half sick days per annum. The study shows that 28.3 percent
of teachers in traditional public schools are chronically absent, which is
defined as missing 11 or more days of school per year due to illness or
personal reasons. Interestingly, in charter schools – most of which are not
unionized – the corresponding number is just 10.3 percent.
Even
within charter schools, the study reveals a glaring disparity. Teachers in
unionized charters are almost twice as likely to be chronically absent as their
colleagues in non-unionized charters – 17.9 percent to 9.1 percent.
The
study’s author, David Griffith, stresses that there’s a direct link between
teacher attendance and student achievement. He writes,
There are roughly 100,000 public
schools in the United States, with over 3 million public school teachers and at
least 50 million students. So every year, at least 800,000 teachers in the U.S.
are chronically absent, meaning they miss about 9 million days of school
between them, resulting in roughly 1 billion instances in which a kid comes to
class to find that his or her time is, more often than not, being wasted….
To read more of this
eye-opening report, go here - https://edexcellence.net/publications/teacher-absenteeism
While this year’s Smarter Balanced test scores are nothing
to rave about in California, there is one bright spot as EdSource’s Carolyn Jones points out: 3rd graders’ math
scores. She writes,
Nearly
47 percent of 3rd-graders met or exceeded the math standards, the
highest number of any grade level. By comparison, only 32.14 percent of 11th-graders
— who spent most of their school years studying the old standards — met or
exceeded standards.
To read more about the math scores go here https://edsource.org/2017/signs-of-hope-amid-smarter-balanced-math-scores/588427 To
see all the results go to http://caaspp.edsource.org/
Over half of California students are not meeting
English standards on the test, and perhaps we need to try a different approach.
To that end, early
literacy specialist Patrick Herrera has some ideas.
He writes that all teachers are language teachers, and when teaching vocabulary,
definitions are not enough. He writes,
Learning
objectives include a purpose, an instructional plan and assessment. A common vocabulary assignment is a list of
words and definitions to memorize for a quiz.
This includes science, history, etc.
Memorized
information will be quickly forgotten.
Also, you want to insure that the lesson becomes part of their speaking
and writing communications.
Let’s review the complete process:
•
Assign vocabulary with definitions and sentences
that reflect the definitions.
•
Review in class, and ask for volunteers to
create another sentence using the word. Students add the sentence to their
assignment.
•
Quiz: Provide sentences from the original
assignment (not the definitions) with the vocabulary word missing. They supply
the missing word.
Vocabulary
is more than words and definitions; vocabulary needs context. Context helps you
think. You can’t think without vocabulary.
On the school choice front, there is good
news coming from Florida, where a recent study conducted by the Urban Institute
shows favorable long-term outcomes for students who enroll in the state’s Tax
Credit Scholarship Program – the largest private school choice program in the
country. As the American Federation for Children reports:
- If a student stays in a private school via the FTC for two years, college enrollment increases by 9-14 percent compared to public school students.
- If a student stays in a private school via the FTC for three years, college enrollment increases by 19-25 percent compared to public school students.
- If a student stays in a private school via the FTC for four years or more, college enrollment increases by 37-43 percent compared to public school students.
To read more, go to https://www.federationforchildren.org/release-groundbreaking-new-school-choice-research/ To see the report, go here - https://www.urban.org/research/publication/effects-statewide-private-school-choice-college-enrollment-and-graduation
The big union news
over the past month is the announcement of the Supreme Court’s willingness to
hear the Janus v AFSCME case. Mark
Janus, a child support specialist who works for the Illinois Department of
Healthcare and Family Services, is compelled to send part of his paycheck to
the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees. Janus, who is
being represented by the Liberty Justice Center and National Right to Work
Foundation, says, “When I was hired by the state of Illinois, no one asked if I
wanted a union to represent me. I only found out the union was involved when
money for the union started coming out of my paychecks.”
The lawsuit is a sequel to Friedrichs v CTA, which
was headed to a SCOTUS victory last year until Antonin Scalia’s death
short-circuited the case. But right-to-work proponents are optimistic that Scalia’s
replacement, Neil Gorsuch, will come down as the fifth vote on the side of
employee freedom. As things stand now, public employees in 22 states are forced
to pay dues to a union as a condition of employment.
To stay up-to-date
on the Janus case, go here - http://www.scotusblog.com/case-files/cases/janus-v-american-federation-state-county-municipal-employees-council-31/
Many teachers unions
are preparing for the worst, and some state affiliates are going to rather
drastic lengths to protect their turf. Anticipating an unfavorable Janus
decision, Education Minnesota, the National Education Association affiliate in
the Gopher State, has come up with a new form that includes the following
wording:
I agree to submit
dues to Education Minnesota and hereby request and voluntarily authorize my
employer to deduct from my wages an amount equal to the regular monthly dues
uniformly applicable to members of Education Minnesota or monthly service fee,
and further that such amount so deducted be sent to such local union for and on
my behalf. This authorization shall remain in effect and shall be
automatically renewed from year to year, irrespective of my membership in the
union, unless I revoke it by submitting written notice to both my employer and
the local union during the seven-day period that begins on September 24 and
ends on September 30. (Emphasis added.)
To read more about
Education Minnesota’s chicanery, go to https://www.americanexperiment.org/2017/08/education-mn-braces-loss-thousands-members-millions-dollars/
The new American
Federation of Teachers U.S. Department of Labor report has been disclosed. As
RiShawn Biddle writes,
The nation’s second-largest teachers’ union
spent $44.1 million in 2016-2017 on political lobbying activities and
contributions to what should be like-minded groups. This is a 29.6 percent
increase over the same period a year ago. This, by the way, doesn’t include
politically-driven spending that can often find its way under so-called
“representational activities.”
Interestingly, the
union gave a whopping $1.2 million to the Atlantic
Monthly, double the amount it gave to the magazine the prior year. Biddle
comments:
You have to wonder if Weingarten and her
mandarins are kicking themselves for not offering to buy a stake in the
Atlantic, which will soon be controlled by Laurene Powell Jobs’ reform-minded
Emerson Collective, which has become a landing spot for U.S. Secretary of
Education Arne Duncan and his former honcho on civil rights enforcement,
Russlyn Ali.
To read more about
AFT largess, go to http://dropoutnation.net/2017/10/03/afts-44-million-spend/ To get Mike Antonucci’s take on the DOL report
and the Atlantic spend, go here - http://www.eiaonline.com/intercepts/2017/10/03/afts-disclosure-report-stirs-things-up/
And on
the subject of unions, a reminder: now
is the time for agency fee payers to claim their rebate. Or, if you are a
full-dues payer but want to withhold the political share of your union dues,
now is the time to get busy. Existing CTA fee payers have until November 15th
to request a refund. For details, go here - http://www.ctenhome.org/how-to-opt-out-teachers-union-nea-cta-aft-cft.html
And
finally, as you well know, information is frequently used to score political
points and make cases for various causes. To that end, CTEN has a “cheat sheet,”
which has been updated on our website – all with original sources. To see it,
go to http://www.ctenhome.org/cheatsheet.html
If
you have information that counters what’s there or would like to see something
added, please let us know. As always, thanks for your continuing interest and
support.
Sincerely,
Larry Sand
CTEN President
Larry Sand
CTEN President
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