Talk about a way to set up tensions between administrators and unions and the ill-informed public. Parents don't understand what is happening, teachers are just beginning to catch on....and Arne Duncan is setting up unions as scapegoats to take the blame if the district doesn't get part of his money.
I can't believe this is happening in a country that has been known for its public education.
Using unions as scapegoats.
From Labor Notes:
Race to the Top: Unions Asked to Play Ball for Education DollarsEducation Secretary Arne Duncan stands ready to dole the cash out to states that most closely model his prescriptions: seeding new charter schools, opening up to alternative certification programs like Teach for America, tying teacher evaluations more closely to student test scores, and instituting merit pay provisions. States and local districts also score points in Duncan’s book by outlining plans to close or hand over schools with low test-score performance to charter operators—forcing entire teaching staffs to re-apply for their jobs in the process.
I forgot to mention that Teach for America only requires as far as I know a two year commitment to teaching. That effectively keeps new teachers pouring in and does away with the need for us old experienced teachers who earn too much to suit Arne.
The contest, says Obama, puts education funding “in competition,” and will award 15 states in April. Round two of the contest will begin in June.
In a nod to teachers unions, both of which lent support—uneasy at times—to the Obama candidacy, Race to the Top awards states that get unions to sign onto applications. The results have been neither uniform nor smooth. Dozens of local and state unions refused to sign agreements in support of state applications, claiming they were not privy to the details of the hastily forged plans—some comprising more than 1,000 pages.
That is not a nod to unions, that is putting the survival of teachers' unions in jeopardy.
Dozens of local unions opposed Race to the Top for fear of vague state and district proposals that could endanger existing collective bargaining agreements and lead to unprecedented privatization. Ten states and hundreds of districts and local unions bowed out, unwilling to exchange autonomy for the promise of federal dollars. Vermont education officials and unions deferred to the second round of the contest, claiming that the money promised was not worth the required changes to their structure. Vermont does not allow charter schools to operate.
As expected, unions are facing the brunt of the “obstructionism” charges. How can labor stand in the way of big-time federal aid, especially when state and local revenues have been decimated by the recession?
Teachers' unions make a handy and convenient scapegoat.
Duncan right away set up
set up confrontations with unions.He targeted CA and NY because of their laws saying that teacher evaluations should be based on more than just students' test scores.
Legislatures in New York, California and some other states have enacted laws that limit, to one degree or another, use of student achievement data in teacher performance evaluations. Both national teachers’ unions oppose the use of student testing data to evaluate individual teachers, arguing in part that students are often taught by several teachers and that teacher evaluations should be based on several measures of performance, not just test scores.
..."California could lose out on millions of federal education dollars unless legislators change a law that prevents it from using student test scores to measure teachers' performance, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan is expected to announce in a speech today.
He is forgetting that students are being given far too much power when their test scores decide everything. From my own experience:
I will never forget that two boys in my class informed me they would not take the FCAT. This was two weeks before the test. They said they hated testing, and no one could make them do it. The principal talked to them, so did the parents and the guidance counselor. We could not get them off the testing list, so they brought the score down for the whole class. Luckily that was the year I retired, and I never bothered to check out the class scores.
I am sorely disappointed in Arne Duncan. I think he does not really care about the teachers and finding true and honest ways to find out their skills and abilities. Because using the unpredictable nature of student testing is surely not going to do it.
This is a Democratic administration pitting school administrators and often parents against teachers and unions. It is wrong, and it is not the way to accomplish real change.